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Online reviews shape consumer trust, but what happens when those reviews can't be trusted? In this episode, I sit down with Anoop Joshi, Chief Trust Officer at Trustpilot, to discuss the ongoing battle against fake reviews and the role of AI in both creating and detecting fraudulent content. With over 300 million reviews on its platform, Trustpilot has been at the forefront of combating fake reviews, recently winning 10 legal cases in the UK against bad actors. As the FTC cracks down on deceptive review practices with fines of up to $50,000 per violation, businesses must rethink their approach to online credibility. Anoop shares insights on what this regulatory shift means for companies and how Trustpilot's AI-driven approach is evolving to stay ahead of generative AI-generated fake reviews. We explore how Trustpilot's transparency efforts led to the removal of 3.3 million fake reviews last year alone and why a combination of AI, metadata analysis, and human oversight is critical for maintaining trust online. As AI-generated content becomes more sophisticated, Anoop also sheds light on emerging trends and the growing need for regulatory adaptability. If online reputation matters to your business—or if you've ever wondered how review platforms separate real feedback from deception—this episode is packed with insights you won't want to miss. Could AI ever be trusted to fully police itself, or will human intervention always be required to maintain trust?
Autonomous Agentic AI Recruiters: Here, Now? If 2025 is going to be year of the Agentic AI, then companies like SeekOut are going to be one of the tech companies at the frontier of building them. We have already reviewed what Agentic AI is (see Ep293!) - and discussed how close and how far we are away from seeing them in production. Can product builders shed more light on where we currently stand - can we even see some of these agents in action? I challenged SeekOut CEO Anoop Gupta to show us what is on the roadmap, and of course Anoop was up for the challenge! Not only will we see the next evolution of one of the most popular recruiting tools on the market, but in doing so better understand how this will shape the contours of future recruiting work. Expectations are high: lets see whether Agentic AI is here, now! We are on Friday 7th March, 1pm PT Register by clicking the green button and follow the channel here (recommended) Ep295 is sponsored by our friends SeekOut SeekOut is one of the world's most popular recruitment technology platforms. Trusted by 1000's of employers worldwide to provide exceptional AI-enhanced candidate sourcing and personalising messaging services. Help your team hire the best talent by using SeekOut.
Join host Madhavi Ravanan in the latest episode of the 10x Growth Strategies podcast featuring Anoop Bhaskaran. Anoop shares his fascinating professional journey, his passion for reading, and delves deep into Ed Catmull's 'Creativity Inc.' Discover the intriguing backstories of Pixar's creation, the visionary leadership of Steve Jobs, and the impactful concept of the 'Brain Trust'. A conversation filled with inspiring quotes, personal anecdotes, and actionable insights for both professional and personal growth. Don't miss this engaging episode packed with the secrets behind Pixar's stupendous success! Topics 00:00 Introduction and Guest Welcome 00:44 Anoop's Background and Career Journey 01:42 Anoop's Reading Habits 05:20 Discussion on 'Creativity Inc.' 07:04 The Pixar Story and Key Figures 21:25 The Brain Trust Concept 26:07 Favorite Quotes and Closing Thoughts
A weekly magazine-style radio show featuring the voices and stories of Asians and Pacific Islanders from all corners of our community. The show is produced by a collective of media makers, deejays, and activists. Tonight on APEX Express Host Miko Lee continues the series on the Asian Prisoner Support Committee's campaign for justice for the APSC 4. The APSC4 are Ke Lam, Peejay Ai, Chanthon Bun and Maria Legarda. All are formerly incarcerated folx who have served their time and are currently incredibly valued leaders, advocates and healers in the community. They are also part of the staff of Asian Prisoner Support Committee and all are at risk of deportation. In our most recent episode we showcased an interview with all of the APSC4, in our upcoming shows we will center on each person's individual story. Tonight we focus on Maria Legarde. Thank you to the HHREC Podcast for allowing us to re-air a portion of their show, which will be linked in our show notes. Maria's story is also featured in the zine we was girls together by Trần Châu Hà. The zine is on display in the Walking Stories exhibit at Edge on the Square in San Francisco Chinatown until February 28th. For more information: Thank you to the HHREC Podcast for allowing us to rebroadcast part of their interview with Maria. Asian American Histories of Resistance timeline For tickets to Edge on the Square event APSC 4: https://action.18mr.org/pardonapsc3/ APSC Website: https://www.asianprisonersupport.com/ APSC Donation Page: https://donate.givedirect.org/?cid=13… APSC Get Involved Page: https://www.asianprisonersupport.com/apsc-4 Appreciation to the HHRC Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@thehhrecpodcast83 Twitter: / asianprisonersc Facebook: / asianprisonersupportcommittee Instagram: / asianprisonersc SHOW TRANSCRIPT: APSC4 Part 2: Maria's Story Opening: [00:00:00] Apex Express Asian Pacific expression. Community and cultural coverage, music and calendar, new visions and voices, coming to you with an Asian Pacific Islander point of view. It's time to get on board the Apex Express. Ayame Keane-Lee: [00:02:01] Thank you for joining us tonight on Apex Express. Welcome to the second part in our series on the Asian Prisoner Support Committee's Campaign for Justice for the APSC4. The APSC4 are Ke Lam, Peejay Ai , Chanthon Bun, and Maria Legarda. All are formerly incarcerated folks who have served their time and are currently incredibly valued leaders, advocates, and healers in the community. They are also part of the staff of Asian Prisoner Support Committee, and all are at risk of deportation. You can help today by urging Governor Newsom to pardon APSC4, and protect them from deportation, which you can find the links for in our show notes. In our most recent episode, we showcased an interview with all of the APSC4. In our upcoming shows, we will center on each person's individual story. Tonight we focus on Maria Legarda. Thank you to the HHREC podcast for allowing us to re-air a portion of their show, which will be linked in our show notes. Maria's story is also featured in the zine we was girls together by Trần Châu Hà. The zine is on display in the Walking Stories exhibit at Edge on the Square in San Francisco Chinatown until February 28th. You can come view the zine in person at the Walking Stories closing event, arriving with our stories on February 28th, 2025, at Edge on the Square in San Francisco, Chinatown, from 6 to 8 pm. Co presented by Asian Americans for Civil Rights and Equality, Asian Prisoner Support Committee and Edge on the Square, featuring readings from Asian Prisoner Support Committee's recent anthology, Arriving, Freedom Writings of Asian and Pacific Islanders, along with a panel discussion with the APSC4. Maria's story, the one we'll hear tonight, that is also featured in the exhibit, echoes the broader themes of the Arriving anthology, Where AAPI community members share their journeys through criminalization, deportation, and reentry. These narratives expose the deep entanglement of the prison and immigration systems while humanizing and making visible the resilience of those impacted. The link to RSVP for the event will be included in the show notes, where you can also choose to donate 25 and receive a copy of the anthology. this event marks the closing ceremony of the yearlong exhibition walking stories, but also a commitment to the ongoing work to center the voices and stories of system impacted individuals through the oral testimonies of those still incarcerated and the panel discussion with community leaders of APSC4, a space where storytelling is not just a practice of remembrance, but a demand for justice and an ongoing continuing call to action is created. So join us at arriving with our stories on February 28th, 2025, from 6 to 8 PM at Edge on the Square, 800 Grant Avenue, San Francisco, California. Find the full details in our show notes and at edge on the square. org. Now let's listen to Maria Legarda share her journey content warnings for mentions of sexual violence, substance abuse, death, incarceration, and trauma. Maria Legarda: [00:05:10] So I grew up in the Philippines, with my grandparents. My first years had the fondest memories there. Couple of years later, we moved to our new home. Had my baby brother and we moved and a couple years later, my sister was born. She had a medical condition when she was born and I saw the change in our household. You know, as she got older, her condition worsened and it took a toll on our family slowly. I withdrew from my folks, detached and I, I built a resentment towards my parents. I was young, this is what we used to have. And this is what's happening now, what's going on. You know, there was no emotional support when we were growing up, me and my brother. The focus was, Trying to get my sister better, you know, but I was young, I was young, and my brother was young for us to understand, you know, what was going on in our household, and, that started the separation between me, my parents, It was tough growing up, I'm the eldest and so I had to be responsible, you know, for my younger siblings and I didn't know. I didn't know what to do. so. When I got older, you know, my dad urged me to go to the U. S., you know, years where our family was in debt. And when I came to the U. S., I saw the opportunity to help my parents actually get out of debt, and help them. I didn't know the cost, the burden that it's going to cost me. being in a different country, and supporting my family alone. And I did everything that I could to help my parents and my siblings, not be in poverty. Not live day to day and have a future for them. but at the same time, being a young adult in America, when I immigrated here, it was after 9/11. So there was a lot of, society was different at that time and finding my place during that time was hard, you know, and I was alone, I was working hard. I was stressed, you know, I didn't have much help. ,and that started the drug use. it was hard for me to assimilate into a culture that it just looks, it's great. You know, being free and being able to experience a lot of different things, but deep down, I don't know how to, Find my place here. You know, I didn't have friends and I have my cousin, And I was dealing with a lot of the tension at home, too You know my mom dealing with my sister's death She passed away Dealing with the money issues dealing with her marriage I was her emotional support, and as a young adult, I don't know how to provide that for my family. And so the drug use became my coping here in a new country with new friends, and I just got tired of being hurt and being pain and, you know, the trauma of losing my sister. How do I deal with that? Losing my family because we were lost, you know, with her. And how do you cope from that? Drugs became my coping. I was numb. I was happy, you know, because I didn't hurt anymore. and, you know, being alone here in the U. S., I turned to online chatting. That's where friendships, I found friendships in there. I was very young and naive and, You know, I met a man online who said all the right things, words, that I felt loved and cared for, for somebody like me that was so desperate for emotional connection and just to feel loved that was huge for me to find that one person to give me that attention. And so for six months, you know, I felt I was at the happiest in my life because I had somebody to turn to, I had somebody to talk to. And, I felt that I, you know, I have somebody with me that understands what I'm going through, um, when my own family is not there for me because they're too busy trying to take care of their own needs. And, um, you know, we started talking and, after six months, he promised to, um, take me out on a date. and when we met, um, it was fun, you know, for the first time seeing somebody behind, you know, the, the conversations and seeing him in person, it was nice. It's real. Right. And, you know, everything happened so fast at that time that, I was excited, but then there's that fear and, you know, we were on our way to where we were going at, you For our first date and he veered off to a hotel and, you know, in my inexperience you know, I was hoping that, okay, why are we veering off to this? This wasn't part of what we talked about, but things were happening so fast and I was engaged in the conversations and what we're going to do, or we're just going to go and see. And, you know, I was very vulnerable and I went with it. And before I knew it. I was at the hotel, you know, with him and, I was hoping and praying that nothing bad would happen, but unfortunately, you know, I was alone and knowing that it was just me and him soon enough, the inevitable would happen. And our first meeting, our first date, I was raped, you know, and, all the signs were there, you know, that desperate for that human connection and that, you know, I trusted him. I trusted him that, you know, he was a good person, but it happened, after that I went home and I told myself that it didn't happen. Pretended that it didn't happen. my mind and my body just disassociated, you know, from what just happened and, you know, went to bed the next day, went to work, like it never happened, like nothing happened. That intensified my drug use. It was my way of coping. Every time I hurt, every time I'm in pain, I feel pain, I feel hurt. I turned to drugs because it made me numb and it made me function. You know, I am able to function and continue on with the next day. Why? Because I have a family who's waiting for me, that depends on me, and I need to take care of them. and that's how it was for me. For the next months, few months later, I found out that I was pregnant from the rape. And when I found out I was pregnant, I stopped using. You know, I was torn and at the same time I was still hoping there was still that small hope that what I had with him was real and I was suffering. Now I know that back then I was suffering from post traumatic, battered women's syndrome. I never got help from what happened that day. and so with the baby I have this, thought that maybe if he knew that I was pregnant, that he would come back to me. That's how my mindset was. I wanted my rapist to come back into my life. That's how desperate I was, you know, was alone. And I wasn't in the right state of mind, you know, with deep in my addiction, not being able to think rationally. By the time I, I asked, you know, for help, I asked my parents if they could, um, come and visit me here in the United States. I didn't know how to tell my mom about my addiction, about the rape, that I just needed them and they couldn't be there for me. And with everything else that's going on in my life, I hit, finally hit my rock bottom and I relapse, I relapse and I used, and me using far along in my pregnancy. That night induced my pregnancy, um, induced labor. And so the following morning, I went into premature labor. Again, I was alone in my room when they induced labor. I was in my bathroom and I gave birth to my son. I got him, picked him up, wrapped him in a towel, and when he wasn't breathing, I panicked. Wrapped him in a towel and put him in the room. And after that I went to go take care and get ready for work. What am I supposed to do with my baby not breathing? got ready for work, called the cab so I can go to work. I didn't make it to work because um, the cab driver took me to the hospital because I was so pale and I lost so much blood. And, um, so I stayed in the hospital and later on, um, medical staff was there. and, you know, the cops were there and I was arrested, I was sentenced to 25 years to life, for the death of my son. I was 24 when I sat in the holding cell of California's biggest women's prison sitting there thinking, this is what. Life is going to be like for me. What is life going to be like for me? How did I get here, you know, and I was, I was in so much denial. You know, I was in so much denial I don't even know where to start. Because at that time, sitting there at that holding cell, I was still in a victim mode. You know, I knew I was responsible for the death of my son, but the extent of it, I couldn't even grasp the severity of how much harm I've caused. And for 14 years, I immersed myself in self help groups to make sure that I understood what happened that night, what happened at that time, you know, 25 years, there's no amount of punishment that I think would, would equate because I give that punishment to myself every single day. There's not a day that goes by that I don't think like, okay, today he would have been 19 years old. I wondered if he was playing basketball, would I take him to football games? Would I take him to baseball games? Like, what would it be like for him? You know, when my parents came to visit, Those were questions like my dad would want it to know, my mom would want it to know, and it's the big elephant in the room, we don't talk about it. But today, um, I hold, I am, you know, I hold responsibility, accountability for all my actions that led to that dreadful night. You know, when, when I went to board and I was found suitable, you know, one of the, one of the programs that, really helped me was, um, We're just to life, you know, forgiveness I have to find forgiveness in myself for what I've done for my past decisions in order for me to move on and make a difference in, you know, for people. If I wanted to help people, how am I supposed to help people if I can't even start healing within me? you know, took all the self help groups so I could have that understanding of where do I need to start in order for me to have a future and so that people around me, I wouldn't hurt anymore the people, those people that are around me. My family, my friends, even people that I don't know that when they see me, they wouldn't get scared of the person that they knew came from prison. You know, that was sentenced to 25 to life for killing her own son. I don't want to be that person. So. I took advantage of all the groups that, you know, were, were offered to us and I earned that second chance. when I went to board and to really deep, look deep in, deep down and where was that anger coming from? You know, why was it so hard for me to ask for help? And the biggest part that I learned was stepping out of denial, acknowledging that the rape happened, that it wasn't my fault, that I could overcome that and, I could take control back, you know, take that back and turn my life around and use that. You know, motivate myself to, find healing and forgiveness. Today I'm a re-entry consultant for APSC. I help folks that are coming home from jails, from prisons, from detention centers. I help them navigate, you know, in their re entry. You know, coming home from detention, so after I, you after I paroled from CCWF, I knew that I would be, I had an ice hold and I would be detained and ICE came and picked me up in CCWF in 2019. You know, the first day of being free, I was welcomed with shackles, with handcuffs and a waist chain around my waist chain. And, I was walking, you know, into a white van and I drove off to the Holding cell, the ice holding cell, and I was on the road for 72 hours back and forth because they, they have nowhere to, put me, all the ice facility detention centers were, I guess, they were packed and they have no room for me. So they finally made room for me and I was in the Delanto where I stayed for 11 months. And. You know, when I was there, I'm just like Bun said, once they get you there, they ask you sign the paperwork, you deport, or you want to fight your case. And I've met Anoop, Anoop prepared me, you know, for when that day comes, like I just needed to let them know that, no, you're fighting because you have people, the community, the family here fighting alongside you. And that's what I told them. I said, no, I'm not. signing, I will go through the process and it was very, it was a very different experience, you know, with being sentenced to 25 years to life than being told, you have to sign this paper because I'm deporting you back to your country because you're not a citizen. You know, they don't see the changed person. They only see the person that was not born here in the United States. They don't see the person that has a family in the community waiting outside that building. They only see a convicted felon that has an aggravated felony that's not a U.S. citizen that needs to get deported back to the country where they were born. So knowing that every day, and I've always said it, you know, every moment in detention center is like a cliffhanger moment. You'll never know when your day is going to be when you don't come back to the dorm and you get shipped off and get sent to a plane. And then next thing you know, the next phone call your family gets is that you're in a country where you don't know where you're going. So that's what it was like in the detention center. You know, it was the onset of COVID when I was able to file, a writ because of my medical condition. And by the grace of God, you know, with the community behind me, Anoop too, was very instrumental. I was released Friday when everybody was telling me that you're not going to get released. You know, the cutoff date, the cutoff time is six o'clock and you're not going to get released and you're not going to get a bond hearing. You're not going to you're not going to get released from here. There's just no hope for you. You know, that's what they tell us in, in detention, you know, there's the chances of us being released from detention. Once ICE has a hold of you is very, very slim. So for us, that's. small hope is really just a teeny tiny window for us. But it takes a community, you know, to work together to get us all out. And I have that support with Anoop, with APSC. So at six o'clock on a Friday, when they said that the judge is not going to rule today, you're going to have to wait. And the last, The last process already for people that were getting released were already done. There's, you're, that's it. You're not gonna get it. But 6:30 came. It was after count time. All the tablets in the detention center was ringing and it was a phone call for me and all I saw was my grandma on the other line saying that, she was crying, crying, hysterically crying. And so my heart dropped because I thought, okay, this is it. I'm getting deported, what I didn't know, was Anoop and my grandma were constantly in communication trying to get me out and the judge made a decision a little after six that before five o'clock Saturday morning, they are to release me. And, it took the community, you know, to get, to make that happen. And on April of 2019, I was released from Adelanto and I was released to Los Angeles. I couldn't, parole to San Francisco, to the Bay area because, um, of COVID shelter in place. Ayame Keane-Lee: [00:23:30] You are listening to 94.1 KPFA and 89.3 KPFB in Berkeley, 88.1 KFCF in Fresno, 97.5 K248BR in Santa Cruz, 94.3 K232FZ in Monterey, and online worldwide at kpfa.org. We'll be right back to Maria's story after we listen to “7,000 Miles” by Ruby Ibarra featuring Ann One. MUSIC That was “7,000 Miles” by Ruby Ibarra, featuring Anne One. You are listening to Apex Express. Now let's get back to Maria Legarda ‘s story. Phillip Winnick: [00:28:19] Um, Maria, how long did you know Anoop throughout this process when you were in the detention center? Um, and how did you manage to get to San Francisco? Maria Legarda: [00:28:31] So I've known Anoop since 2015, end of 2015, beginning of 2016, right before board. I needed to seek his advice about, you know, my ICE detainer and how long. Like what the process is going to be, if I choose to fight it, if I don't fight it. And around that time, you know, we just had a new president in the Philippines and what would it look like for me if I don't win my case? Like, what are the chances, you know? So that's how we started corresponding, 2015, I prepped for board and then, um, when I got out in 2019, Prior to that, 2018, we started, corresponding frequently, more frequently because, My board date, um, is coming up, and, you know, when they ask me about questions about immigration, like, what do I say, Anoop, like, because the board wants to know everything, just like Bun mentioned before. They want to see the big picture. If we grant you parole, what are you going to do? So when it comes to immigration, like, what are your plans? So I have to have a realistic, it needs to be realistic for me. You know, there's no ifs and buts. I have to like, Anoop, what do I do? And if it's not possible, then I have to have a plan B, you know? So that's how we started corresponding and Anoop guided me in a lot of my preparation. and before I went to Adelanto, he prepped me step by steps on what it It's gonna look like for me once ICE picks me up and everything was on point, you know, they came and got me an R& R, I left around nine o'clock, the white van came and picked me up, I went to Fresno holding cell from there, they're gonna, assign me a, facility, you know, so that's how it started. And then when I ended up in Adelanto after 72 hours, they finally were able to locate me just like, when, you know, Anoop has a way of, you know, it's like a, you know, We have a GPS within us and Anoop just knows where to find us. So finally, you know, my grandma was telling me that Anoop told her that I was in Adelanto and, you know, later on I'm going to be in the system. And so, when I got there, everything that Anoop told me to, like, when you get there and they ask you for your signature, you tell them that, you're fighting your case, this is what's happening. You give them my number and, you know, so that's the step by step process. And, that's, that's how Anoop got me, situated when I got to Adelanto and in preparing for my, my hearing, he walked me through it too. from the Bay Area, I was all the way to like, what, San Bernardino County in Adelanto and he was guiding me every step of the way. He had some, The Advancing Justice LA kind of like helped me, you know, with representing. Um, so I have extra help, and then preparing for CAT hearing, preparing for, just, you know, the whole time that I was in Adelanto, I was in constant communication with Anoop. Sometimes it's not even about legal support, just emotional support. Like, okay. Anoop you have to, you have to just tell me. Tell me what I'm looking at. Tell me what I need to do. What are my next steps? What are my chances? And that really helped a lot, you know, stepping out of denial. That was my life story or, you know, I'm always in denial. And so this time, like, no, Anoop I need to know, like, what am I looking at? and so when. when it wasn't going, it didn't look well, you know, for me, as far as my hearing, it gave me all my probabilities, And I know what I need to do. So that's how we, I've always, um, until today, I still seek Anoop's advice about everything. you know, not being able to get my ID, like Anoop would be my next step, not being able to get, I said, some paperwork, some documents. So every step of the way in this whole journey, he's always been our, You know, emotional support, legal support, in everything. Anoop Prasad: [00:32:40] I think what's really amazing and special at APSC is I met most of the staff at APSC when they were incarcerated. And most of the APSC staff first met each other in prison, often when they were just kids. And I think that makes APSC just like such a special place. Um, and I met Maria through Nia Norn, who's our co director and met Maria at CCW Afton prison. Um, and I'd been writing Nia about her ICE hold and her deportation when she was serving a life sentence. and then she over mail introduced me to Maria and I started writing with Maria. and there's this ripple effect of hope and freedom from every person who gets out and Maria has helped so many other people and she got out, get out of prison and out of ICE and same with Bun.That's helped so many other folks in San Quentin and throughout the entire prison system get out. And so it's really amazing seeing folks come home and then come back to get other folks out. Phillip Winnick: [00:33:33] Yeah, it's incredible. Um, Maria, why don't you tell us about some of the experiences you had, um, helping people out with the APSC? Maria Legarda: [00:33:41] Oh, where do I start? Phillip Winnick: [00:33:43] Most memorable, I guess. Maria Legarda: [00:33:44] Yeah, the most memorable. you know, I've been sober for 20 plus years now and, one of my clients, um, when I introduced myself to her, I always introduced myself as a formerly incarcerated individual because I don't want them to feel that I'm, you know, most of my clients have had traumas and have been judged for a very long time. And I don't want them to think that I'm law enforcement or anything like that. And so I always tell them, oh, hi, my name is Maria and I'm formerly incarcerated. I served 14, 15 years and they're like, what? And so that opens up, you know the, the door and it becomes an easy conversation to have. And so when one of my clients, she told me that Maria, I'm 20 months sober. I was like, Oh, I'm so happy for you. And she's like, really? It's like, yes. Don't you know that it's an accomplishment? It's like, why? It's like, Oh my God, you just give me one day. I'd be the happiest person. And she said, why? Because I'm 20 years sober, 20 plus years sober. You're 20 months. You're going to get to where I'm at. And so that started that conversation and that just bond between us. She's, you know, she, she's worked hard and she needed some help in different aspects of, you know, her trying to get her life together. Like Maria, I need to get my kids. Um, I'm in the process. What do I do? It's like, okay, don't worry. We're going to find you some resources. We're going to find you some, help with the law clinics and see who can take your case. And we'll start from that. It's like, okay. she needs housing. We signed her up for a housing and, it didn't work out for her because she already participated in a similar program. So what we did was, okay, maybe we should start, you know, asking your CPS and this is what we're going to do. So having case plan goals in order for her to see what would best suit her, what she wants to do in life and what she wants for her kids. we worked on that, you know. and her desire to be a substance abuse counselor. The team, actually, I had talked to [unintelligible]. We need to help her get enrolled and she doesn't have, financially, she's struggling. She has three kids on coming back to her. You know, she's getting her custody, her three kids custody back. So, you know, her hands are gonna be full. we need to help her. What do we do? He's like Maria, enroll her. Like, I can? Like, yes, enroll her. I was like, really? I can enroll her? And to me, when my boss said I can enroll her, I was like, oh my god, that's like, you know, you're giving something. Like, that's a gift. It, it doesn't cost a lot, but that's her future. That's the kid's future. And her having, you know, a career after that. She's been on drugs for as long as she remembers, right? So that's the greatest achievement for her at that time to be a substance abuse counselor. And just like, Maria, can you please help me find a class and to be able to do that? That's why I'm doing the work that I do because if I can make a difference, even just by enrolling them, you know, what other programs do that? I don't know if they do that, out of their organization's pocket to sponsor somebody, you know, for higher education. So that was one of my memorable moments helping one of my clients get her classes to become a substance abuse counselor. Thank you. You know, and then the other one, we had one of our clients struggling with substance abuse and, his wife called me and she's not actually our client, but you know, we're all about family reunification. So if the wife, if the kids are having trouble and they have my phone number, they can reach out to us and we'll help them. Right. And she reached out and she felt really this burden of guilt because. Like Maria, I don't want to turn him in, but like he was drunk and being a, being a domestic violence survivor, right? I told her like, look, the first, that's the best, like, he's not going to be mad at you because you put your daughter's care and your care in your life first before anything and because I know he's a good father to her and a good man to you, besides that, you know, addiction, it creeps up on you and it crept up on him. And I said, you did the right thing. You did the right thing for him, because when the time comes, you were his accountable, accountability partner. So, you guys are both responsible for your daughter, and you did the right thing. And just walking her through that, because the guilt that was eating her up, because the whole family's mad at her because she put him there, she shouldn't have to go through that alone. You know, so, just taking the time, throughout the week and checking up on her. Do you need food? I can, we have pantry available for you. like, do you need diapers formula for the kid, for your daughter? Like, we have somewhere, a place that you can go to, to get some help in these trying times. And she's like, okay, Maria, I'm going. So other than the emotional support and you know, the, other things that she needs, just getting her through that toughest time, there's just no, there's no, amount of like, there's no satisfaction other than seeing a mother and the daughter being together and then now reunited with, you know, them reunited as a family. Phillip Winnick: [00:39:19] The feeling of you helping people who feel alone in a situation that you are similar to, and that you felt alone in, what is that feeling of being able to give these, these people somebody to talk to who have been through what, what they've been through? Maria Legarda: [00:39:38] You know, it feels good is not even like amount to it because, um, I always wondered what if somebody, you know, what if somebody took their time, you to ask me, like, Maria, is everything okay? I felt like that could have. You know, that could have made a difference. Maybe not, but I wouldn't know, right. Because of what I went through, but I don't want that to be me. So when people come my way, I, I encounter people and, you know, I get a sense of like, what's going on, you know, like what's going on in your life. Like, you know, to have a conversation and just get to know them just a little bit, Then that's when I know, you know, like, okay, this is what they're going through. So let me just walk them through it. Why? Because some people don't even know that they need that at that moment, at that time. You know, I, I didn't know that maybe, you know, if one of the lifer OGs, you know, and in the beginning of my time, if she didn't make an effort and say like, baby, you know, you can be more than just this around you. There's hope out there for you. And that, gave me that small window of hope that maybe there is a chance for me to get out of this place and see myself outside these walls, right? So when I encounter people and I know that they've been in situations, I don't know exactly what it is, I'll just give some time and just get to know, talk to them just a little bit. Just a little bit to see, like, what is it that you need? Maybe that's, you know, a few seconds would make a difference, right? So if that's what it needs, if that's what somebody needs, a few seconds of my time to deter them from making that one major, decision in their life that's gonna alter the course, right, of their life and go down that path that I went down on, like, that I've gone through, if I can prevent them from that. Then I did my job for that day, not my job, but I did what I'm supposed to do, you know, I felt like I went through all these obstacles in life because I have a purpose now, you know, and it's not about saving everybody, but just being there for that person at that moment when it counts. Ayame Keane-Lee: [00:42:01] We'll be right back after the next song, “GRLGNG” by Rocky Rivera. MUSIC You are listening to Apex Express. That was “GRLGNG” by Rocky Rivera. Thanks again to the HHREC podcast for allowing us to re-air a portion of their show. Let's get back to it. Phillip Winnick: [00:46:22] That's incredible. And I'm so happy for you that you found that for yourself. Why don't you, you were, you were talking about the support groups a little bit earlier. Why don't you, uh, tell me more about that? Maria Legarda: [00:46:33] Oh, so APSC, created, me and my director created, community and, re entry empowerment, which stands for CARE. It's APSC's first women's support group for formerly incarcerated women and transgender folks here in the Bay Area. And. You know, after years of incarceration, you know, navigating in, society, right, coming back home, transitioning into society, there's a lot of overwhelming experiences and obstacles that we all go through. And so I know a lot of people. Women need that support, but where do we get that support? So we've been in a lot of re entry groups, support groups, and men have it, like they have it it's, you know, it's available for them, but what about the women? And so when we started it, um, we started with 24 people, asking is this something that you're interested in? And majority of them said, yes, like, we need this because women wear many hats, you know, some are daughters, sisters, mothers, grandmothers, and there's a lot in their lives that they go through. and as formerly incarcerated, not everybody understands what it's like. So for us, you know, it's, we live right next to each other, right? If I need help and I need support, I'm going to knock on the door like, Hey, you got a few minutes. Like, cause I need to talk right now. Like, okay, come on. We'll walk down the yard, walk down and hash it out, talk and, you know, what's going on with you. It's like, I'm going through it. We can just talk. But now being out here, some live in the Bay area, some live in Antioch, some live in Pittsburgh, some live in Dinuba, some live up the mountains, like how do you find that support? Right? Some are tech challenged. They don't know how to zoom. They don't know how to FaceTime. So how do you do that? So we. made it possible for them, you know, to find, to have that space where we can meet every month and check in and see what's happening with it, with each other. You know, what's going on? What kind of support do you need? What resources do you need? Who do you need to get connected with? And, you know, being in that support group for six months, it's like I never left my sisters inside. You know, the bond that we formed, and I know Bun can, you know, relate to this, the bond that we formed, you know, in those walls, it just continued in that Zoom space, you know, and it, recharged, that motivation, that encouragement that we've always looked out for each other when we were inside. So now that we're out here, like, no, it doesn't mean that just because we're all out that we have to stop. So that space being created for us, we were able to reconnect and help each other out and playing phone tag and have text thread messages and emails. And so it just needed to get started. Like, no, this is what we're going to do. This is how we can be there for each other. And so the program was a success. You know, we graduated in December. We started with 24, but due to work conflicts, we graduated with 19 women, who participated and completed the program. We had three in person events. Their whole family came with us with a graduation. And the one thing we wanted for our graduates, our participants, is that to spend a weekend with their family without having to worry about, Oh my God, we're going to have to travel. It's going to cost us money. No. We wanted them to spend time with each other as a unit, as a family, because of all those years that they were separated. Right. And not only that, be in the same space with the sisters that they've left, that they've been celebrating Christmases for two decades that's how much time these women have spent with each other. And now that they're out, they just needed to find a place to, you know, have a reunion. But at the same time, continue what we have when we were inside. Cause it doesn't mean it has to stop. So now with the success of the program, We're getting emails and we're getting, you know, when can we start the next group? When can I participate? When can I come over? Am I going to be able to come to the Bay Area reunion? So there's that hope, you know, that they're not alone because, like we know now it's, you know, these are challenging and difficult times and we're here, you know, we we just. Don't leave any of our sisters behind we just come on we got you just like we've always had each other's backs. Ayame Keane-Lee: [00:51:18] You can learn more about Maria's story in the zine we was girls together by Trần Châu Hà. It portrays the story that you just heard along with more details. Maria's story is one of many. She's a survivor of gender based violence, forced to migrate to the United States due to the economic consequences of Western imperialism in the Philippines. Migrant women like Maria experience the compounding forces of colonialism, border exclusion, and economic exploitation in the United States, making them even more vulnerable to abusive relationships. In their attempts to survive, these women are usually met with criminal punishment rather than support or care. An estimated 94 percent of those in women's facilities are abuse survivors. In the absence of state sanctioned support, these women turn to one another, building their own networks of care and advocacy for each other's freedom. These networks illuminate the nature in which feminist care work is inherently a practice of racial solidarity between Black, Brown, Indigenous, and API women. The zine we was girls together, seeks to honor Maria's story alongside that of her community of incarcerated women, documenting their solidarity campaigns, mutual aid projects, and life affirming relationships to one another. Thank you so much for joining us. We hope you will have the opportunity to join the live event on February 28th and to take action in support of the APSC4. You can also find out more about Maria and the APSC4 in the Asian American Histories of Resistance Timeline that is both online and in augmented reality form in the gallery. This timeline spans from 1873 to present day. We have interviewed scholar Helen Zia on Apex Express multiple times. She talks about moments that are MIH, or missing in history. In the timeline, Acre, Asian Americans for Civil Rights and Equality, presents moments of our Asian American story that are MIH. One of those stories is about Maria. Apex Express is a proud member of ACRE, Asian Americans for Civil Rights and Equality. We are committed to fighting for a more just and equitable world. As Grace Lee Boggs said, We are the leaders we've been waiting for. Miko Lee: [00:53:26] Please check out our website, kpfa.org. To find out more about our show tonight. We thank all of you listeners out there. Keep resisting, keep organizing, keep creating and sharing your visions with the world because your voices are important. APEX Express is created by Miko Lee, Jalena Keane-Lee, Preeti Mangala Shekar, Anuj Vaidya, Swati Rayasam, Aisa Villarosa, Estella Owoimaha-Church, Gabriel Tangloao, Cheryl Truong and Ayame Keane-Lee. The post APEX Express – 2.13.25 – Arriving APSC4 Maria's Story appeared first on KPFA.
#341 In this episode, Guy and his guest, Dr. Anoop Kumar delved into the concept of healing and wholeness, emphasizing the limitations of conventional medical education and the importance of understanding the complete human anatomy through the physical, mental, energetic, informational, and consciousness layers. Dr. Kumar shared his personal near-death-like experience, shedding light on its profound impact on his perspective on life and medicine. He also discussed how nutrition, movement, connection, and rest are critical components of holistic healing. Dr. Kumar presented his vision for healthcare transformation and the upcoming course on the science of consciousness to bridge the gap between current healthcare practices and holistic wellness. Tune in for a deep dive into human potential and the future of healing. About Dr. Anoop: Dr. Kumar grew up in a family steeped in the philosophy of Advaita (non-duality). He enjoyed exploring the intersections of consciousness, academics, and practical life. After a near-death-like experience in medical school, he began to integrate a deeper understanding of consciousness with existing medical knowledge, elucidating the science of consciousness as a common knowledge base for all healing systems. Dr. Kumar is Board-Certified in Emergency Medicine and holds a Master's degree in Management with a focus in Health Leadership. He is the author of numerous articles on mind-body perspectives as well as of two books, Michelangelo's Medicine and Is This a Dream? Key Points Discussed: (00:00) - Dr REVEALS How You're Kept DISCONNECTED From Your True Power (00:14) - A Mystical Experience: Sitting in the Middle of the Sun (00:41) - Insights on Mental Illness and Spiritual Traditions (01:02) - Podcast Introduction and Dr. Kumar's Mystical Experiences (02:13) - Welcome Dr. Anoop Kumar (03:55) - The Concept of Healing and Wholeness (05:13) - The Journey of Reassociation and Education's Role (10:47) - Dr. Kumar's Near-Death Experience (21:03) - The Five Bodies Model of Human Anatomy (28:16) - Intervening at the Mental Body (28:47) - Multi-Directional Healing (29:24) - Current Medical Education Limitations (31:24) - The Power of Belief Systems (32:30) - A Shift in Paradigm (34:21) - The Body's Healing Potential (36:34) - Nutrition and Movement (42:43) - Connection and Rest (48:03) - The Wonder Drug Within (49:03) - Conclusion and Resources How to Contact Dr. Anoop Kumar, MD, MM:www.numocore.com About me:My Instagram: www.instagram.com/guyhlawrence/?hl=en Guy's websites:www.guylawrence.com.au www.liveinflow.co
Dave and Chris chat with Anoop Pillarisetti, owner of the New Orleans–inspired restaurant Strange Delight, about the pain and, in turn, triumphs that can come with opening and running a restaurant. Anoop takes Dave and Chris through the conceptualization and opening of Strange Delight, discusses the pressures and uncertainties of running a restaurant, and dives into the love it takes. Anoop also gives an atlas of Fort Greene, Brooklyn, and a How to Menu at the restaurant. Hosts: Dave Chang and Chris Ying Guest: Anoop Pillarisetti Video Producers: Ira Chute and Victoria Valencia Audio: Ira Chute and Victoria Valencia Majordomo Media Producers: Kelsey Rearden and David Meyer Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Anoop Kumar, MD, founder of Numocore and creator of The Science of Consciousness, talks with J about the movement towards wellness as an emerging new health system. They discuss the limitations of western medicine, perceptions of what a human being is, solving the mind-body "problem," systemic transformation, Numocore (Nutrition-Movement-Connection-Rest,) accessing mind through movement, mechanisms behind religion and science, rest as a form of creativity, and the deepest of all expressions of health and soul. To subscribe and support the show… GET PREMIUM. Check out J's other podcast… J. BROWN YOGA THOUGHTS.
In this episode of Lessons I Learned in Law, Scott Brown is joined by Anoop Joshi, Chief Trust Officer at Trustpilot. Anoop's unique career journey from private practice to leading trust, transparency, and legal operations for one of the world's leading review platforms offers insights for any lawyer looking to break new ground. With a background that blends law, tech, and business, Anoop shares the key lessons that have shaped his approach to legal practice, leadership, and career growth.Listen in as Anoop discusses:Why project management is a powerful skill for any in-house lawyer, and his approach to making complex projects succeed.The importance of broadening one's perspective and looking beyond traditional legal disciplines.The value of defining and sticking to personal principles, even when navigating the complex intersection of law and ethics in tech.Whether you're curious about the evolving role of legal leadership in the digital age or seeking practical advice on career management, Anoop's journey is filled with valuable takeaways for any legal professional.Key Takeaways:Project Management as a Career Supercharger: Anoop shares how developing project management skills can set lawyers apart in in-house roles and why empathy and understanding stakeholder needs are vital.Keep Your Eyes on the Horizon: The impact of exposure to various disciplines is a recurring theme, as Anoop reflects on how his non-traditional career path has shaped his approach to law.Stick to Your Principles: Learn why Anoop believes defining and adhering to personal values and professional "red lines" is essential, particularly in high-stakes roles that blend legal and ethical considerations.Bringing Tech to Law: From his days in software engineering to leading Trustpilot's legal operations, Anoop discusses the benefit of blending tech with legal for greater impact.The Chief Trust Officer Role: Dive into what it means to head up trust and transparency for a platform like Trustpilot, managing everything from content integrity to compliance.Links Mentioned in the Episode:Connect with Anoop Joshi on LinkedInThe Personal MBA by Josh KaufmanLex Fridman Podcast
In this episode of the Kubernetes Bytes podcast, Ryan and Bhavin sit down with Diego Devalle and Anoop Gopalakrishnan from Guidewire to talk about how they went through an application modernization journey and adopted Kubernetes and cloud over the last 5 years. Diego and Anoop share their experiences around how they drove this modernization inside Guidewire by both championing organizational change, and introducing Kubernetes and cloud technologies, while at the same time ensuring that they serve their existing customers in the insurance industry. Check out our website at https://kubernetesbytes.com/ Show links: https://medium.com/@guidewire-engineering https://www.youtube.com/@GuidewireSoftware https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-WaEneeIJs https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKCwMO4UeJ8 https://www.guidewire.com/about/careersTimestamps: 00:05:24 Interview with Diego and Anoop 01:02:37 Key takeaways
Sunday @Grace Chapel
Sunday Service @ Grace Chapel, Bangalore Message by : Anoop Cherian
I'm From Here Too brings us a middle grade story of friendship, prejudice, senseless bullying, hope, and Anoop, a first generation American Indian Sikh. Transcript here
Sunday Service @ Grace Chapel, Bangalore Message by : Anoop Cherian
Have you tried everything, but still feel like you can't lose weight? If you're frustrated with midlife weight gain and stubborn belly fat, the issue may be hormonal shifts and gut health. This is exactly what we dive into on the Wellness Revolution podcast with special guests Ann Marie Tom and Anoop Asok. We discuss the importance of reducing stress and improving gut health for weight loss and the fact that calorie restriction is not going to work if hormones are imbalanced. We also discuss the importance of healing leaky gut before menopause and how over-exercising is detrimental to your weight loss goals. Co-founders Ann Marie Tom and Anoop Asok use their Metabolic Mastery Method to offer a holistic approach to weight loss that considers metabolic health, gut issues, stress management, personalized nutrition, and exercise plans. They provide women with strategies that work with their changing bodies, rather than against them, to achieve sustainable weight loss results. Thank you to our sponsors: ReNewU Interest List: Join for free here https://products.ambershaw.com/signature-waitlist Kroma Wellness: Use code AMB_KROMA20 for 20% off when shopping https://kromawellness.com FREE Workshop: https://products.ambershaw.com/first12 Find more from Ann Marie Tom & Anoop Asok: Website: anntomfitness.com Instagram: @ann_marie_tom FREE Midlife Metamorphasis Kit: DM keyword “Revolution” to @ann_marie_tom Find more from Amber: Instagram: @msambershaw TikTok: @msambershaw Website: ambershaw.com What We Discuss: 05:14 Breaking Free from the Reward-Punishment Cycle 09:28 Addressing Hormonal Imbalances for Sustainable Weight Loss 23:11 The Link Between Gut Health and Belly Fat 24:56 Steps to Improve Gut Health and Reduce Belly Fat 28:37 Addressing Leaky Gut for Better Health 32:17 Personalized Approaches to Healing Leaky Gut 36:26 Improving Energy Levels for Women Over 35
EVEN MORE about this episode!Join us as Dr. Anoop Kumar shares how his near-death experience in medical school transformed his approach to patient care, leading him to see patients as inherently whole. He critiques modern medicine for overlooking the holistic view of health and emphasizes the importance of human connection and Eastern philosophies in healing. Dr. Kumar introduces the concept of whole human anatomy, which includes physical, mental, energetic, informational, and consciousness layers, advocating for a comprehensive approach to health. The episode concludes with a Q&A session offering insights into true wellness and the mind-body connection in healthcare.Guest Biography:Anoop Kumar, M.D. communicates a bold, new vision of healing and healthcare based in a more comprehensive understanding of you as a whole human being. He is a board-certified emergency physician and Co-founder and CEO of Health Revolution, a company building a health discovery ecosystem, beginning with a revolutionary digital health platform. After a near-death-like experience in medical school, Dr. Kumar's view of himself and the world shifted, leading him to start communicating at the intersection of consciousness and health. Episode Chapters:(0:00:01) - Integrating Consciousness With Medicine(0:13:12) - Exploring Spirituality in Medicine(0:21:08) - Understanding Health and Healing(0:27:36) - Reimagining Healthcare for True Wellness(0:37:29) - Body Reflects Mind Pattern(0:45:45) - Mind-Body Connection in Healthcare(0:54:16) - Whole Human Anatomy in Healthcare(1:04:11) - Healing, Potential, and Health Revolution(1:10:31) - Q&A Session With Julie RyanPlease join Julie next week with your question.Thursdays at 8pm ET, 7pm CT, 5pm PT.https://askjulieryanshow.comAnd, please leave a five-star review and subscribe so you can hear all the new episodes.Sponsors & RecommendationsDisclaimer: This show is for informational purposes only. It is not intended to be medical, psychological, financial or legal advice. Please contact a licensed professional. The Ask Julie Ryan show, Julie Ryan, and all parties involved in producing, recording and distributing it assume no responsibility for listener's actions based on any information heard on this or any Ask Julie Ryan shows or podcasts.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Sunday Service @ Grace Chapel, Bangalore Message by : Pastor Anoop Cherian
Don't Face Cancer Alone"The 6 Pillars of Healing Cancer" workshop series provides you valuable insights and strategies to support your healing journey - Click Here to Enroll Is there more to health and wellness than what your doctor tells you?Dr. Katie sits down with Dr. Anoop Kumar, emergency physician and co-founder of HealthRevolution.org. With years of experience in both traditional medicine and holistic healing, Dr. Kumar pulls back the curtain on our current healthcare system, revealing why it might not be serving you as well as you think. You'll gain insights into why some health problems including cancer persist despite treatment, and what you can do to take charge of your own healing process. Discover why your health is about so much more than just treating symptoms. Chapters:06:12 - Dr. Kumar's life-changing near-death experience11:50 - The shortcomings of modern medical education18:05 - Redefining health beyond the absence of disease24:33 - The four pillars of health34:18 - The power shift: From doctor-centered to patient-empowered care40:41 - Integrating alternative health models with Western medicine45:07 - The future of medicine: Less intervention, more prevention51:23 - Taking responsibility: How physicians and patients can drive changeLearn why Dr. Kumar sees allopathic medicine as complementary rather than primary care. Explore four simple yet powerful pillars that could revolutionize your approach to health. These aren't complicated medical procedures or expensive treatments – they're fundamental principles that anyone can apply. Listen and learn why consciousness might play a bigger role in your health than you ever imagined, and how this understanding could lead to breakthroughs in your own life.You'll have a new perspective on your body's incredible ability to heal and thrive. You'll understand why true health is about more than just the absence of disease, and how you can tap into your own innate healing powers. Connect with Dr. Anoop Kumar, MD at: https://www.healthrevolution.orgSend us a Text Message.Don't Face Cancer Alone"The 6 Pillars of Healing Cancer" workshop series provides you valuable insights and strategies to support your healing journey - Click Here to Enroll MORE FROM KATIE DEMING M.D. 3 Things You Need to Know About Cancer: Get Your Free GuideWork with Dr. Katie:www.katiedeming.comFollow Dr. Katie Deming on Instagram:The.Conscious.Oncologist Take a Deeper Dive into Your Healing JourneyFollow Dr. Katie Deming's Linkedin Here Please Support the Show Share this episode with a friend or family member Give a Review on Spotify Give a Review on Apple Podcast DISCLAIMER:The Born to Heal Podcast is intended for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for seeking professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Individual medical histories are unique; therefore, this episode should not be used to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease without consulting your healthcare provider.
Anoop Nannra, CEO and Co-Founder of Trugard, is an industry-recognized blockchain leader focused on improving cybersecurity and due diligence in Web3. He is also featured on our list of Cybersecurity Pundits. In this episode, Anoop joins host Paul John Spaulding to discuss the recent breach of Gala Games and the $22 million in crypto that hackers stole from the platform. • For more on cybersecurity, visit us at https://cybersecurityventures.com
അമീബിക് മസ്തിഷ്കജ്വരം ശ്രദ്ധിക്കേണ്ട കാര്യങ്ങള് എന്തൊക്കെ? ചികിത്സ എന്ത്? | Dr. Anoop Kumar A. S by THINK
Hey there! Today, I'm sharing the 4 Pillars of Health as defined by Dr. Anoop Kumar, MD and how you can use them to create a more peaceful relationship with food so you can be at your healthy desired weight and love your life more. Would love to know your thoughts on this topic! Hit me up on Instagram. Did you enjoy the episode? DM me on instagram and let me know what you thought.
This episode's Community Champion Sponsor is Ossur. To learn more about their ‘Responsible for Tomorrow' Sustainability Campaign, and how you can get involved: CLICK HERE---Episode Overview: Clinicians are drowning in a deluge of unstructured medical data, struggling to efficiently extract critical insights that could improve patient care and outcomes. Our next guest, Dr. Tim O'Connell, is taking on this monumental challenge as the co-founder and CEO of emtelligent.With a unique background spanning IT, radiology, and medical informatics, Tim experienced firsthand the limitations of existing natural language processing tools in healthcare settings. Driven to develop a powerful solution, he founded emtelligent to harness cutting-edge AI and language models.While together, Tim shares his pioneering journey building emtelligent's innovative technology that structures overwhelming volumes of unstructured patient data and how he and his colleagues are empowering healthcare organizations to operate more efficiently, reduce physician burnout, and unlock data-driven insights to transform care quality.Join us to learn from Tim and how the emtelligent team is unlocking healthcare's unstructured data troves. Let's go! Episode Highlights:Tim's advice: Get out and make a change, find a business partner with complementary skills ("your Anoop", his co-founder)Origin story: Seeing limitations of existing NLP tools, partnering with NLP expert Dr. Anoop SarkarCutting-edge technology: Structuring massive volumes of unstructured medical data with advanced language AIPowerful use cases: Transforming needle-in-a-haystack data challenges, drastically reducing manual chart review workloadsFuture vision: AI-augmented healthcare teams over next 2-5 years, reducing burnout by automating drudgery tasksAbout our Guest: Dr. Tim O'Connell is a practicing radiologist in Vancouver and cofounded emtelligent in 2016. He has served as vice chair of medical informatics in the University of British Columbia's Department of Radiology since 2017. Prior to his clinical and entrepreneurial careers, Dr. O'Connell worked as an IT professional for Nortel Networks and Bell, where he was director of engineering for the Bank of Montreal account.Early in his career, Dr. O'Connell realized that radiologists were often tasked with a volume of work that didn't afford them the time needed to carefully review and understand each patient's clinical history. In 2015, he met Dr. Anoop Sarkar, a widely published Ph.D. and full professor of natural language processing (NLP) and artificial intelligence. Dr. Sarkar shared Tim's interest in medical language processing and desire to develop meaningful solutions that would have a positive impact on the lives of patients and care providers. It quickly became obvious to both that they were perfectly matched to solve the problem Tim had identified, together bringing a powerful combination of deep clinical and data science expertise. emtelligent was officially formed when Drs. O'Connell and Sarkar joined forces with Jeff O'Connell, an experienced technology operations management leader; and Dan Carriere, a seasoned expert in building and scaling biomedical startup ventures, adding experienced entrepreneurship and business leadership to the team. Collectively, the team successfully built and launched emtelliPro®, one of the industry's first deep-learning-based Medical Language Understanding engines.Links Supporting This Episode:emtelligent Website: CLICK HEREDr. Tim O'Connell...
Ann and Anoop Asok are dedicated professionals with a background in nursing and a passion for holistic health. Ann had her struggles with hormonal imbalances and emotional eating, she discovered the transformative power of the Metabolic Mastery Method. With over a decade of experience as registered nurses in the ER, ICU and Dialysis and certifications as a personal trainer and Fitness Nutritionist and Holistic female Hormonal health practitioner, they empower women going through peri menopause to eat what they want without sabotaging results. their mission is to empower clients to achieve optimal health and wellness by learning to nourish their bodies without restriction or fear. We're discussing the struggles and strategies for women facing midlife metabolism changes, particularly during menopause, with Ann and Anoop in today's episode. The three of us chat about the common myths surrounding weight loss and the inefficacy of extreme dieting. We discuss the importance of protein, amino acids, and magnesium, while exploring how to tackle menopause belly fat through muscle building and smart exercise. Ann Maria and Anoop also explain their Metabolic Mastery Method and the impact of stress on metabolic health. In this episode: How to target belly fat through muscle building and smart exercise routines without intense workouts. Why balanced nutrition is key to metabolic health rather than fat-focused meal plans. How emotional aspects of extreme dieting affect our bodies. What challenges midlife women face in weight loss. How protein and amino acids help maintain muscle mass and metabolic health. Why being thin doesn't necessarily mean being healthy, and the complexity of weight and health. How hormones affect fat distribution and metabolism after age 35. Why building muscle is crucial for increasing metabolic rate and burning more calories at rest. How to effectively exercise for weight loss, emphasizing strength training over intense cardio. Why a protein-rich diet can reduce cravings and improve satiety, aiding sustainable weight loss. How extreme dieting can lead to metabolic damage and disrupt natural hunger. Why managing stress is essential to prevent belly fat accumulation and support overall health. How the Metabolic Mastery Method provides a personalized approach for women over 35. The Metabolic Mastery Method: https://anntomfitness.com Sponsors Bioptimizers Magnesium Breakthrough. https://bioptimizers.com/hormone Get 10% of your purchase with coupon code HORMONE. The CAROL Bike CAROL Bike was developed with leading exercise researchers to deliver the shortest, most effective workouts. Get $100 off your CAROL BIKE with coupon code HORMONE. Listen to the episode I did with Ulrich Dempfly on The CAROL BIKE on The Hormone Solution. Try Kion amino acids and get 20% off your purchase with link https://getkion.com/hormone. Listen to the episode Maximize Your Muscle Growth with Essential Amino Acids with Angelo Keely. Interested in joining our NEW Peptide Weight Loss Program? Join today and get the details here. Join our Women's Group Coaching Program OnTrack TODAY! Karen Martel, Certified Hormone Specialist & Transformational Nutrition Coach and weight loss expert. Visit https://karenmartel.com/ Karen's Facebook Karen's Instagram
In this comprehensive discussion, Fund Manager and Head of Research Anoop Vijaykumar and Shray Chandra distil the key lessons from over five years of managing the Capitalmind Adaptive Momentum portfolio. Get a concise overview of the principles of momentum investing driving the portfolio's success. Learn from our real-world lessons on why momentum investing works for long-term wealth creation 00:36 Introduction 01:54 Momentum strategy in the last 5 years 03:30 Difference between the fundamental and quantitive styles 08:00 Random correlations when backtesting a quantitive strategy 10:30 Capitalmind Adaptive Momentum strategy 15:05 Why does momentum investing work? 18:54 Lessons learned from 5 years of managing momentum strategy 26:00 Will momentum stop working 29:30 How can we get more out of the momentum strategy?
Please enjoy my interview with Anoop Kumar about his near death experience, and the four engines of health!WHERE TO FIND ANOOP: 28 DAY PROGRAM: https://healthrevolution.org/28daysWEBSITE: https://healthrevolution.orgINSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/healthrevolWHERE TO FIND MELISSAWEBSITE: https://lovecoveredlife.com/VIDEO PODCAST: https://www.youtube.com/@lovecoveredlifepodcastINSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/lovecoveredlife/ TIKTOK: https://www.tiktok.com/@lovecoveredlife BE A GUEST: https://www.lovecoveredlife.com/beaguestEMAIL FOR OTHER BUSINESS INQUIRIES: Melissa@lovecoveredlife.com
Wise Divine Women - Libido - Menopause - Hormones- Oh My! The Unfiltered Truth for Christian Women
Welcome back to the Wise Divine Women Podcast, today we speak to Ann Maria Tom and Anoop Asok! So wonderful to speak to fellow Canadians based out of British Columbia. Together as a dynamic duo, they help women overcome hormonal imbalances and emotional eating through the powerful Metabolic Mastery Method. Both Anna Maria and Anoop have over a decade of experience as registered nurses in the ER, ICU, and Dialysis. Both have certifications as personal trainers, Fitness Nutrition Specialists, and Holistic female Hormonal health practitioners. They empower women going through peri-menopause to eat what they want without sabotaging results. The Metabolic Mastery Method was honoured with the GRA Award 2023 for being the most sustainable weight loss approach amidst all the fad diets out there. Let's journey towards hormonal balance and improved well-being together. Links IG https://instagram.com/ann_maria_tom?r=nametag FB https://www.facebook.com/ann.thomas.90813?mibextid=LQQJ4dTikTokhttp://www.tiktok.com/@annmtom Want to talk personally to Ann? https://anntomfitness.typeform.com/Apply --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/wisedivinewomen/message
ആന്റി ബയോട്ടിക്കുകള് ഒരു കോഴ്സ് മുഴുവന് പൂര്ത്തിയാക്കേണ്ടതുണ്ടോ, ഡോക്ടറുടെ നിര്ദേശമില്ലാതെ ആന്റി ബയോട്ടിക്കുകള് കഴിക്കാമോ? എന്താണ് പ്രശ്നം, സാമൂഹിക പ്രത്യാഘാതമെന്ത്? തുടങ്ങിയ കാര്യങ്ങള് സംസാരിക്കുന്നു ആസ്റ്റര് നോര്ത്ത് കേരള ക്ലസ്റ്റര് ക്രിട്ടിക്കല് കെയര് ഡയറക്ടര് ഡോ. അനൂപ്കുമാര് എ.എസ്.
Welcome to episode one of Rise of the Vat Spawn! In this episode, our protagonists are birthed from colorful vats before fighting some undead skeletal animals. Dragon Warrior gets stabbed in the guts. Warlock Roc gets sprayed by goo. Bat Alchemist manipulates that same liquid goo to freeze the baddies in places. Tiger Wizard tames a skeletal tiger. They're introduced to Anoop, the Marshal of Mummies, and their creator, an undead dragon named Dr. Drecolitch, explains the necropolis they're in, the city above (Def Jamisus),its political structure, the great dragon wars, and the dragon orbs that he desires.They fly through the necropolis on Dr. Dracolitch's back to a walled enclave filled with the mutilated exiles of Def Jamisus, learning about how crime is dealt with in Def Jamisus. They return to Dr. Dracolitch's to heal their wounds, and are introduced to Anoop's grow room.--ANNOUNCEMENTSDUNGEON CATS: Tiger Wizard's rules-fluffy mini-RPG Dungeon Cats is live on Kickstarter for Zine Quest, and fully funded! THE MEGA DUNGEON MEN EP: Our latest song “More Than Meets the Eye” is out now on all streaming platforms. GAME FACE CON: Epic Levels will be attending the inaugural Game Face Con in Baltimore on March 9th & 10th! GARY CON: Epic Levels will be attending Gary Con March 21st-24th for Dungeons & Dragons 50th anniversary celebration. FLUKE Mini-Comics & Zine Festival: Epic Levels will be attending this small press festival along with our pals at Mystic Punks RPG. It will be on March 30th in Athens, Georgia at the 40 Watt Club.NEW POSTER MAP: We have a new poster adventure map now available for purchase at Exalted Funeral based on our Mad Dungeon season one, episode 20, Song of the Shriekfrapp, with the legendary Erol Otus—who not only made the adventure with us, but also illustrated the 11×17 front-side poster image! JOIN OUR MAILING LIST by clicking the newsletter button at epiclevelsrapgods.com—Thanks for listening to Season Three of the Epic Levels Mad Dungeon podcast, where D&D hip hop group Epic Levels alternate between “Rise of the Vat Spawn,” an actual play using Mystic Punks RPG, and Side Quests where we interview other game creators.You can support us via Patreon for early episode releases, bonus map content, extra art, access to our discord server, and lots of other exclusive goodies.Get nerd merch and stay up to date with socials: HEREMad Dungeon is hosted by Andrew Bellury, Steve Albertson, Robin Bellury and produced by Zach Cowan.Theme song by Epic Levels and beat by Jay Domingo.Additional Music by Space Brother© 2024 Epic Levels. All characters in our adven
Anoop Gupta is the CEO and Co-Founder of SeekOut, an AI-powered Talent Intelligence Platform helping organizations recruit, retain, and grow talent. Anoop started SeekOut after an 18-year career at Microsoft. During his tenure, Anoop was the Corporate Vice-President of the multibillion-dollar Unified Communications Group (Skype + Exchange). He was TA to Bill Gates, advising on technology and product strategy, and as a Distinguished Scientist at MSR, he led work on AI, Natural User Interfaces, and Telepresence. Prior to Microsoft, Anoop was a tenured professor at Stanford University and he holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week, I'm excited to welcome Anoop Asok and Ann-Maria Tom to the podcast. Together they are known as the weight loss whisperers who focus on metabolic mastery and hormonal health to provide their clients with real results. In this episode, we discuss where so many of us go wrong when wanting to lose weight, the importance of calories versus quality of food, and the strategy to actually keep the weight off for good. Over to Anoop and Ann-Maria. Some questions asked during this episode: Where do many of us go wrong when wanting to lose weight? How can we ensure we keep the weight off? How important are calories vs the quality of food we eat? https://180nutrition.com.au/ This week I'm excited to welcome Anoop Asok and Ann-Maria Tom to the podcast. Together they are known as the weight loss whisperers who focus on metabolic mastery and hormonal health to provide their clients with real results. In this episode, we discuss where so many of us go wrong when wanting to lose weight, the importance of calories versus quality of food, and the strategy to actually keep the weight off for good. Over to Anoop and Ann-Maria. (01:15) Hey, guys. This is Stu from 180 Nutrition and I am delighted to welcome Ann-Maria and Anoop, also known as the weight loss whisperers to the podcast. Guys, how are you both today? Ann-Maria (01:27) We're doing fantastic. We are in the middle of winter here in Canada. It's cold, but it's good. Stu (01:37) Exactly right. Ann-Maria (01:38) [inaudible 00:01:38] here today. Stu (01:40) Fantastic. Well, I really appreciate you sharing some of your time. First up, for all of our listeners that may not be familiar with you or your work, I'd love it if you could just tell us a little bit about yourself, please. Ann-Maria (01:50) For sure, my name is Ann and this is Anoop and we are husband and wife. We are fitness coaches and we basically teach people how to lose weight while eating whatever they want, that's what we do. The reason why we got here and all that dates back to three, four years before when COVID started, everyone was sick. (02:16) We are also registered nurses in the ER. We were working in the emergency room at that point in time. We saw a lot of younger population coming through the emergency doors with variety of health issues, especially when we were in the middle of that COVID season. One of the reasons why we started our coaching back then. (02:36) One of the other reasons is also just our journeys, personal journeys, which we'll talk about here in a second, but we literally teach people how to lose weight by [inaudible 00:02:48] Stu (02:51) Well, it can be so confusing because there are a number of different strategies. If you were to jump on the internet right now, you'd see that some people say it's just all about the calories, that's all it is. Whereas other people say, "No, no, it's more about the quality of the food that you eat." Whereas other people say it's about the timing and maybe a mixture of those two as well. (03:12) Maybe there's a personal aspect to it where we need to look at our own physiology in terms of our genetics and our digestive system, et cetera things like that. I guess the question then in my eyes is that where do many of us go wrong? What are the glaring mistakes that we make when we want to lose weight? Ann-Maria (03:33) That's a great question. I think the reason why most of us or most of us are not able to lose weight and where we fall apart is the part that we go all in when it comes to the diet part. We cut a lot of food, then we go into this binge-eating and then we do a ton of exercise. There is not enough balance, I would say, in what we are trying to do, and that's where most people fall short. (04:03) As much as it is true that we need to be in a caloric deficit for us to lose weight, you have to make sure also that your body is ready for it. I don't know how many of you listening this know this, but yes, caloric deficit is required for you to lose weight, but most of the weight loss happens in our brain because the brain is what regulates the weight loss. (04:26) Our brain is literally our thermostat, meaning it wants to keep us in homeostasis, meaning our brain always prioritizes survival over weight loss. One of the biggest mistakes people are making these days is eating very few calories, cutting too much food all at once. Whenever our brain senses too much weight loss happening, again, it goes back to when I said it tries to bring us back to that homeostasis, the vital mechanism. (04:58) How does it do it? By really increasing, upping our hunger cues, making those donuts in the break room feel much more enticing and yummy than it normally is. Physiologically, our metabolic rate also slows down so that we can conserve more energy and send that right back to building up the [inaudible 00:05:21]. Technically, when you are trying to ease eat less food, your brain wants to cheat more. (05:28) The hunger is what is going to really give you in those situations. Sometime we don't even realize when that we are in such a drastic caloric deficit, we end up eating more at the end of the day. When you are below reaching that set points, metabolically speaking, you end up eating more to maintain that same level of hunger you had before. (05:55) This is why it's really impossible for you to maintain that weight that you lost with intense calorie restriction. One of the reasons, biggest reason why yo-yo dieting is the best diet out there for weight gain not for weight loss. Yes, to answer your question, eating less food and [inaudible 00:06:15] For full interview and transcript: https://180nutrition.com.au/uncategorized/anoop-asok-ann-maria-tom-interview/
THIS SHOW WAS RECORDED IN FRONT OF A LIVE AUDIENCE Join an amazing cast of characters and the Black Rose Writing authors who created them in this episode of LAUNCH PAD. Murder, mayhem, ghosts, intrigue, secrets, altruism, and the power of story all come together as we discuss writing, novels, point of view, and so much more. Listen and fall in love with your next great read. Find out more about these authors at: Anoop Judge - https://anoopjudge.com/ Edward J. Leahy - https://www.facebook.com/edward.leahy.7 Kim McCollum - http://kim-mccollum.com/ Susan Sage - http://www.susansage.net/ LAUNCH PAD combines the best of book celebration and solid marketing strengths. Each on-air episode is hosted by Grace Sammon and celebrates book releases and the authors that create them. Each episode engages guests and listeners in the book launch journey from concept to publication. Applying her years of experience as an educator, entrepreneur, author, and storyteller herself, Grace brings to readers, reviewers, book club members, and more an intimate look at some of today's newest releases. Visit Grace at her website www.gracesammon.net. Contact Grace about being a guest on the show, email her at grace@gracesammon.net Follow Grace: On Facebook https://www.facebook.com/GraceSammonWrites/ On Instagram https://www.instagram.com/GraceSammonWrites/ On LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/grace-sammon-84389153/ Visit author marketing coach, Mary Helen Sheriff at her website www.maryhelensheriff.com/marketing for more about information about how she can help you navigate this marketing of your book. Be sure to sign up for her marketing newsletter while you are there. Follow Mary On Facebook @maryhelensheriff On Instagram @maryhelensheriff On LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/maryhelensheriff/ On Book Bub @maryhelensheriff #launchpad #bookish #bookishroadtrip #roadtrip #bookmarketing #Storytellers # Storytelling #AuhtorInterview #LetsTalkBooks #LeaveYourMark #AuthorLife #StorytellerLife #ArtofStory #AuthorTalkNetwork #AuthorTalkNetwork #awardwinningfiction #womensfiction #memoir #historical fiction #WFW #womensfictionwritersassociation #nationalwomensbookassociation #awardwinningfiction #novelist #historicalfiction #bookdebut #debutnovel #booklaunch #launchpad #bookish #bookishroadtrip #roadtrip #bookmarketing #Storytellers # Storytelling #AuhtorInterview #LetsTalkBooks #LeaveYourMark #AuthorLife #StorytellerLife #ArtofStory #AuthorTalkNetwork #AuthorTalkNetwork #awardwinningfiction #womensfiction #memoir #historical fiction #WFW #womensfictionwritersassociation #nationalwomensbookassociation #awardwinningfiction #novelist #historicalfiction #bookdebut #debutnovel #booklaunch #paperlanternwriters #BlackRoseWriting #murder #ghosts #detectives LAUNCH PAD is a copyrighted work © of Grace Sammon and Authors on The Air Global Radio Network.
Anoop Kumar, MD, MM communicates a bold, new vision of healing and healthcare based in a more comprehensive understanding of you as a whole human being. He is Co-founder and CEO of Health Revolution, a front-line emergency physician, and author of Michelangelo's Medicine and Is This a Dream?After a near-death-like experience in medical school, Dr. Kumar realized our current system does not know what "health" truly means and began to integrate a deeper understanding of consciousness with existing medical knowledge. He helps people experience this by activating their Four Engines and applying Mind-Body-Flow Theory, which he offers through his flagship 28-Day Jumpstart course, a gateway to healing on many levels.Dr. Kumar is Board-Certified in Emergency Medicine and holds a Master's degree in Management with a focus in Health Leadership. Visit him at healthrevolution.org for webinars, courses, consultations, and deep explorations of the nature of consciousness and healing
Rod Grant, Quentari Walker and Christian Adrianzen join Jeff for a podcast with the men who played Jim, Marcus, Anoop and Stuart from the feature film Women Want Everything! WATCH WOMEN WANT EVERYTHING! on Prime Video Women Want Everything! Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/womenwanteverything Rod's Website: http://rodgrant.info/ Follow Q on IG: https://www.instagram.com/quentari_walker/ Christian's IG: https://www.instagram.com/chris.covers/ Inspiration Films: https://inspirationflms.wixsite.com/inspirationfilms Sponsors: BetterHelp: Go to https://betterhelp.com/macolino for 10% off your first month of therapy with BetterHelp and get matched with a therapist who will listen and help #sponsored FLAVIAR! https://flaviar.5d3x.net/JMacPod Buy Jeff a drink - once a month? He'll love you forever and might even like you a little... You choose whether it's a cheap domestic or a fine Canadian whiskey! https://anchor.fm/jeffmacolino/support Follow Me!!! https://twitter.com/saintjmac https://www.facebook.com/jeffmacolinopodcast https://www.instagram.com/saintjmac/ https://www.minds.com/saintjmac/ IMDB Page: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt17046562/?ref_=nm_knf_t1 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/JeffMacolino TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@jeffmacolino Art Credit: Chase Henderson --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffmacolino/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffmacolino/support
In this episode, Dr Vignesh Devraj is interviewing Dr. Anoop Kumar, an emergency physician and the co-founder of Health Revolution. Having spent most of his life exploring philosophy, science, spirituality, and medicine, Dr Kumar raises some very interesting questions on the current understanding of the human anatomical model which opens brilliant conversations on how the current diagnostic and treatment criteria are based on an incomplete understanding of what it means to be a human being. The topics discussed in this episode are: How the current medical community holds an incomplete anatomical understanding of the human body How the current diagnostic methods and treatments are broken The importance of incentivising good health Exploring why the current medical systems are reluctant to change? Redefining Primary and Complementary Healthcare You can know more about Dr Anoop Kumar in the below links: https://www.healthrevolution.org/ https://www.instagram.com/dranoopkumar?igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ== BALANCE THE MIGHTY VATA - ONLINE COURSE NOW AVAILABLE What makes Ayurveda unique in its treatment approach is its practical wisdom on the concept of Vata. Vata is responsible for Prana - the life energy, nervous system - the master panel of our body, and our emotions. In Ayurveda, it is mentioned that controlling Vata is the most difficult part of healing and recovery. Recently I have recorded a workshop on - Balancing The Mighty Vata which has over 6 hrs of content, with notes filled with practical inputs that can be integrated into our life. You can access this at https://drvignesh.teachable.com/ For further information about Dr Vignesh Devraj, kindly visit www.vigneshdevraj.com and www.sitaramretreat.com Instagram - @sitarambeachretreat | @vigneshdevraj Twitter - @VigneshDevraj If you are interested in doing one on one ayurvedic consultation with Dr Vignesh Devraj please find the details in this link - https://calendly.com/drvignesh/50minute-session-with-dr-vigneshdevraj?month=2024-01 If you are economically challenged, please use the form provided to request a free Ayurvedic consultation here. (Link - https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd29nHcrC1RssR-6WAqWCWQWKKJo7nGcEm8ITEl2-ErcnfVEg/viewform ) We truly hope you are enjoying our content. Want to help us shape and grow this show faster? Leave your review and subscribe to the podcast, so you'll never miss out on any new episodes. Thanks for your support. Disclaimer: - The content of the podcast episodes is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical procedures, consultations, diagnosis, or treatment in any manner. We strongly do not recommend using the content of these episodes as medical advice for any medical conditions for you, others, or for treating your patients.
Anoop Kumar, MD, MM communicates a bold, new vision of healing and healthcare based in a more comprehensive understanding of you as a whole human being. He is Co-founder and CEO of Health Revolution, a front-line emergency physician, and author of Michelangelo's Medicine and Is This a Dream?After a near-death-like experience in medical school, Dr. Kumar realized our current system does not know what "health" truly means and began to integrate a deeper understanding of consciousness with existing medical knowledge. He helps people experience this by activating their Four Engines and applying Mind-Body-Flow Theory, which he offers through his flagship 28-Day Jumpstart course, a gateway to healing on many levels.Dr. Kumar is Board-Certified in Emergency Medicine and holds a Master's degree in Management with a focus in Health Leadership. Visit him at healthrevolution.org for webinars, courses, consultations, and deep explorations of the nature of consciousness and healing.
Trying to figure out what to do with your metabolism and tired of restricting your favorite foods? Busy juggling work and family life while trying to find time to care for yourself? Ann Tom and her husband Anoop Asok understand the needs of busy professionals raising kids and they've created a Metabolic Mastery Program to help busy clients understand their individual metabolisms. With a decade of experience as ER nurses, Ann Tom and Anoop Asok bring extensive knowledge of anatomy, physiology, and hormones to their coaching and they are on a mission to help folks live healthier and happier lives. In this episode of The Health Fix Podcast, Dr. Jannine Krause interviews Ann Tom and Anoop Asok on myths, tips and how blood sugar spikes are keeping your weight on. What You'll Learn In This Episode: Why fasting can be harmful with PCOS Best time to eat carbs to prevent fat deposition Why pairing protein/good fat with carbs helps prevent sugar spikes An easy hack to eat your favorite foods Resources From The Show: Metabolic Mastery Program at Ann Tom Fitness Instagram: @ann_maria_tom Midlife Metamorphosis Plan Book mentioned in the podcast - Glucose Revolution
Anoop Bikram Shahi, the magnetic Nepali model, actor and Manhunt International Nepal, has graced the silver screen in over 24 films, showcasing his brilliance in iconic roles like “Hasiya”, “Lakhey”, and “Bir Bikram”. He won the D Cine Award 2015 for Best Actor in a Negative Role in the movie Hasiya. Transitioning to television, he now reigns as a celebrated gang leader on the Nepali adventure reality show, "Himalaya Roadies."
Next Level Soul with Alex Ferrari: A Spirituality & Personal Growth Podcast
Anoop Kumar encourages audiences to rethink the relationship between mind and body in a way that informs the moment to moment experience of our lives. He communicates this vision through the lens of the Three Minds–a framework that declares consciousness to be fundamental and matter to be its product. Anoop is the co-founder of Health Revolution, a company that is shifting the state of society from dis-ease to healing, and he is the host of the Healing is Possible podcast. He is board-certified in emergency medicine and holds a master's degree in management. He is also the author of two books, Michelangelo's Medicine and Is This a Dream?Please enjoy my conversation with Anoop Kumar.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4858435/advertisement
ER Doctor has Near-Death Experience that completely TRANSFORMS his Life | Dr Anoop Kumar | NDE #NearDeathExperience #SurvivalStory #CloseCall #BrushWithDeath #LifeAfterDeath #MiracleMoments #BeyondTheBrink #SecondChance #NDEjourney #CheatedDeath #GuardianAngels #NearMissChronicles #UnbelievableEscape #HeartStoppingMoments #NearDeathEncounter #FateIntervention #LuckyToBeAlive #OutoftheAbyss #NearFatalExperience #ResilienceStories --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ndeworld/support
To deliver the right solutions for customers, businesses need the right data and AI tools to track customer preferences and improve continuously. Technology such as ChatGPT has paved the way for companies to start experimenting with generative AI, but what are the negative impacts associated with this adoption, and do customers want to interact with something like an AI chatbot? This month, Anoop Kumar, AVP, Senior Principal Technology Architect, Digital Experience at Infosys, joins the show to talk about the power of emerging AI technology. Listeners will learn: How customers can brace for these technological changes.The security precautions to beware of.The impact AI technology will have on businesses in the coming years. Follow Blue Acorn iCi: https://www.linkedin.com/company/blue-acorn-ici/ Follow Anoop Kumar on LinkedIn and Twitter: https://www.linkedin.com/in/anoop-kumar-p-0390146a/https://twitter.com/anoopkumar_p
Anoop Kumar founded the Nalanda Academy in 2013 in Wardha, Maharashtra. He is pioneering groundbreaking work by providing education to marginalized students from all over the country and has successfully helped hundreds of students from marginalized castes gain admission to top universities in India and abroad. His life, journey, and ideas are nothing short of revolutionary, and I won't be exaggerating if I say that he is one of the living legends who has done unparalleled work. This is the podcast where he skillfully deconstructs the myth of merit, which may significantly alter your perspectives on the current education system. Please be aware that this podcast contains some details that might be triggering for some people, as it touches upon topics such as suicides and extreme caste traumas. Anoop's account: https://twitter.com/Anoopkheri Nalanda Academy: https://nalanda-academy.org/our-team/ This podcast doesn't have any corporate funding or support so the contribution by listeners is very important for its survival. Please support it here: 1. BuyMeACoffee:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/Anuragminus/w/26114 2. Patreon (Most preferred medium): https://www.patreon.com/anuragminusverma 3. InstaMojo:(UPI/Gpay/PayTm) : https://www.instamojo.com/@anuragminusverma/ 4. PayPal ( Subscribers living outside India can pay through it): https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/AnuragMinusVerma?locale.x=en_GB Please rate the podcast on Spotify. Anurag Minus Verma's Twitter: https://twitter.com/confusedvichar Follow the podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/minusverma/?hl=en
Asia Mattu is a dynamic voice actor with an eclectic mix of credits to her name, including Rocky in Super Monsters, Rugo in Gigantosaurus, Aurora in My Little Pony: Best Gift Ever, and Par-Nani in Deepa & Anoop, for which she was nominated for a Leo Award AND a UBCP/ACTRA Award. It's a stunning filmography for a kid from Ladner who grew up loving Robin Williams' performance in Disney's Aladdin and now gets to voice prehistoric animals, monsters, sea creatures, dinosaurs, grannies, and a veritable parade of fun characters. In this light-hearted and fascinating interview, Asia talks about her award-nominated role in Deepa & Anoop, the threat of AI, and what a lot of A-listers don't understand about voice acting. Episode sponsor: UBCP/ACTRA
The HR Technology Conference gave us the opportunity to interview some brilliant minds and this episode is no exception as we welcomed Anoop Gupta CEO Seekout. Over time, job descriptions become the ‘kitchen sink' - no one can really tell if it's realistic or capturing what is needed. SeekOut Assist solves for this and was recognized by the Human Resource Executive as Top HR Tech Product for 2023. Working for MicroSoft and reporting to Bill Gates, Anoop shares the inside scoop of Bill's beverage of choice. A concise explanation of how to build a diverse candidate pool at the top of the funnel and ensure you dont overlook the talent that exists inside your organization. Pro Tip: Start with over 1 Billion candidate profiles! The benefits of generative AI in a sourcing tool will open your eyes to the positive changes coming and see what is already possible.
Stories in this episode: - The Fake Security Guard, by Anonymous (0:39) - He Hid in Our Salon for 3 Hours, by Rachel (9:56) - The Woman on the Plane, by Anoop (20:34) - Karma, by Yoga Warrior (27:22) - Our Creepy Third Wheel, by Anonymous (34:37) - After Hours at the Park, by Michael (40:30) - He Tried to Trap Me on the School Bus, by Mayflower (46:50) Extended Patreon Content: - I Knew He Was Off, by Anonymous - He Showed Us a Snuff Film, by Megan - Perry, by Bren - A Story from Nepal, by Rambhat - The Guy in the Car, by Koko Due to periodic changes in ad placement, time stamps are estimates and are not always accurate. All of the stories you've heard this week were narrated and produced with the permission of their respective authors. Let's Not Meet: A True Horror Podcast is not associated with Reddit or any other message boards online. To submit your story to the show, send it to letsnotmeetstories@gmail.com. Get access to extended, ad-free episodes of Let's Not Meet: A True Horror Podcast with bonus stories every week at a higher bitrate along with a bunch of other great exclusive material and merch at patreon.com/letsnotmeetpodcast. This podcast would not be possible to continue at this rate without the help of the support of the legendary LNM Patrons. Come join the family! Check out the other Cryptic County podcasts like Odd Trails, Welcome to Paradise (It Sucks), and the Old Time Radiocast at CrypticCountyPodcasts.com or wherever you get your podcasts! PDS DEBT is offering free debt analysis to our listeners just for completing the quick and easy debt assessment at www.PDSDebt.com/meet. Listen to A Ghost Ruined My Life with Eli Roth wherever you get your podcasts! Check it out at here! Get $1.49 per meal by going to www.EveryPlate.com/podcast and entering code 49meet. - Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/groups/433173970399259/ - Website - https://letsnotmeetpodcast.com/ - Patreon - https://patreon.com/letsnotmeetpodcast - Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/letsnotmeetcast/ - Twitch - https://www.twitch.tv/bongotate
Anoop Kumar has started a health revolution. Through an enterprise that bears precisely that name, he and his associates want us to understand that healing is possible. In Western culture, we have no idea what health is. Modern medicine is the true complementary medicine. What should be defined as conventional medicine are the methods of healing that have been around for millennia. Anoop Kumar talks about four engines of health: nutrition, movement, connection and rest. And they work in our physical as well as our mental bodies. ”What does the placebo effect suggest? It suggests that the line between the mind and the body is not concrete”, he says. Anoop got in touch with the Hindu spiritual school of advaita vedanta already as a child. It is similar to what is often referred to as non-duality. He had a hard time combining those insights with western materialism. But he realized that they are both valid. After his medical training – he is an ER doctor – Anoop decided to dedicate himself to bridging the perceived gap between east and west, body and mind, spirituality and science. He does not want to label his philosophy as idealism, advaita, non-dualism or anything else. He has developed an explanatory model he calls the three minds framework. ”Everything is consciousness, and consciousness is everything”, Anoop says. ”That doesn't mean there's no bodies, no minds, no personalities. It doesn't mean that this is all just a dream and it doesn't matter. It doesn't mean that we can't work with the body or that modern medicine is useless.” ”None of this is true. There are so many misconceptions associated with this.” One oft-used metaphor to understand how consciousness is fundamental is that consciousness is the ocean, and we and everything else we perceive as separate are the waves, or even the ripples. Different expressions of the ocean, but all water. ”At deeper levels of reality, as we go deeper into that ocean, there is a radiant non-duality. The best word we have for that is consciousness.” There is a real shift happening in health care right now, according to Anoop. And not just in health care. The bigger picture is that amazing things are happening, but at the same time, darker things also have to surface. ”It's almost like an abscess. We're getting to that eruption phase.” Anoop Kumar has published two books; Michelangelo's Medicine and Is This a Dream? Health revolution Online course (at a DISCOUNT) Anoop's website Anoop's books
Anoop Kumar, MD, founder of Health Revolution, talks with J about the primacy of consciousness and its implications on allopathic medicine. They discuss Anoop's early exposure to nondual philosophy, becoming an emergency physician, definitions of consciousness, the "recognition" problem, multidirectional healing, measuring outcomes, inverting primary and complimentary care, Atman and Brahman, the three minds of experience, and creating bridges of understanding with insights into the fundamental nature of the cosmos. To subscribe and support the show… GET PREMIUM. Check out J's other podcast… J. BROWN YOGA THOUGHTS.
In this episode, Dr. Dimple an Ayurvedic health coach engages in a deep conversation with Dr Anoop Kumar, a Front-line emergency physician, Author of “Michelangelo's Medicine” and “Is This a Dream?” A rare coming together of alternative traditional sciences and western medicine, in this conversation Dr Anoop confesses from his experiences at the emergency room that “we don't know health, we only know disease.” Primary medicine remains preventive healthcare lifesciences that helps you address nutrition, movement, sleep, lifestyle and the root cause of your disease rather than waiting to get sick. Modern medicine here becomes complementary for emergencies and acute conditions. Is ayurveda really a primary healthcare science… and does modern science become complimentary medicine ? To find out, listen to this one of a kind podcast interview that dwell deep into the concept of holistic science and preventive wellness ! Podcast with Dr. Anoop Kumar- Intro 2:46 Dr. Anoop talks about his books 7:51 Dr. Anoop shares a story that made him reconcile the whole process 10:07 Dr. Anoop shares his wisdom of 4 engines that are important for human sustenance 13:05 The understanding of how modern medicine is a complimentary medicine 14:25 Dr. Dimple talks about how we have understood disease but have not understood health 16:01 Dr. Anoop elaborate more about 4 engines and what he wakes up to 29:01 Dr.Anoop's favourite tools for holistic- mental, emotional and physical health 35:45 Dr. Dimple and Dr. Anoop talks about the disconnect and how important it is to stay connected to our Indian roots Outro “Heal Your Gut, Mind & Emotions” is now a best seller on Amazon ! Ranking as on 23.9.23 #97 in book (Top 100 Books) #1 in Mental and Spiritual healing #4 in Healthy living and wellness
In this podcast, we cover - 1. Mental models for planning different ‘chapters' of your life & taking different ‘tours of duty'. 2. Lessons on networking and augmenting your leadership skills. 3. The art and science of navigating career transitions Anoop Prakash is currently President of the Ambulance Division at the REV Group Inc, a publicly-traded specialty vehicles manufacturer based in Brookfield, Wisconsin. At REV, Anoop runs a manufacturing and distribution organization of 1500 people and four facilities, building a broad range of ambulances to precise customer specifications, serving federal government, municipalities, and private ambulance service providers, both in the US and abroad. Prior to REV Anoop spent 10 years with the Harley-Davidson Motor Company, where he first led the company's market entry into India, the acquisition of the company's largest independent distributor in Canada, and, finally in the US market, leading US Marketing and US Dealer Development. Prior to Harley-Davidson, Anoop had the opportunity to serve as a senior political appointee in the Administration of President George W. Bush, holding senior roles at both the US Small Business Administration and US Department of Housing & Urban Development. Prior to his government service, he held strategy, business development and sales roles at two technology companies, and worked as a consultant for McKinsey & Company, advising consumer and retail clients. Immediately after graduating from Stanford, Anoop served for four years active-duty as an Intelligence Officer in the US Marine Corps. Anoop also has an MBA from Harvard Business School. In his free time, Anoop enjoys motorcycling, books on politics and policy, and travels with his wife Gita (also class of '95) and two daughters. Anoop is Vice President of the Board for the Hunger Task Force in Milwaukee, and leads the Wisconsin chapter of Leadership Now, a non-partisan organization of business leaders supporting democracy. From his time as an Intelligence Officer, through to his current role as a Division President, Anoop has had to work either with or inside government organizations at every level and in multiple countries. Anoop credits his broad exposure through Public Policy and concentration in International Policy as critical to his understanding and ability to bridge the two worlds of business and government.
Actor and Singer-songwriter Anoop Desai joins the podcast! A long-time friend of Pablo the Producer, Anoop talks to the Big Hawk and Pablo about his transition from the music industry into TV and film. The boys reminisce about their time at Carolina, the work ethic required to excel in any professional industry, Anoop's time on American Idol, and Carolina basketball. Plus, we get Anoop's All-Time Carolina squad. Watch the episode on YouTube! Follow us on Instagram @sleephawkworldwide and on Twitter @SleepHawkWWSponsored by Jimmy's Famous Seafood.