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¡No admitan imitaciones! Hace 20 años comenzamos a hablaros de productos que desaparecieron de nuestros supermercados. ¡Y hoy hacemos un podcast con ello! Se viene el Superagente 86 para hablar de la Cherry Coke, de pizza con mejillones, Patatas pimentón molón, helado Boomy, Lunchables y muchas, muchísimas cosas. Haremos mas. ¿Cual de estas porquerías echas de menos? Encuentra aquí los ARTÍCULOS ORIGINALES: https://viruete.com/blog/tag/alimentos-que-fracasaron/ #cherrycoke #lays #telepizza
Casting news of the new live-action Masters of the Universe movie is out, and Paulo and Dori reject He-Man 2026 due to his tiny nipples.We never knew how good we had it with Dolph.We visit the 80s tuck shop of our minds and fill our bellies with corn syrup and artificial colouring as we reminisce about our favourite discontinued cool drinks.80s movies didn't care if they offended you, and after discovering that the Hoff has crabs, we find out that he now has a penguin. Plus, we wonder who would win in a fight between La Linea and Morph.Paulo watched the Pelé movie Hotshot, where he expected to see Pelé play soccer and actors act... instead, he got Pelé acting. And actors doing something soccer adjacent.Finally, we find out which of Dori's traits are brought out due to Blondie, and don't wear your white heels to a silent 80s disco.Time StampsLive-Action He-Man casting news (00:06:30): https://foreternia.com/2025/02/he-man-actor-nicholas-galitzine-reveals-first-official-image-for-the-masters-of-the-universe-movie 80s cool-drinks (00:17:54): https://www.cleveland.com/nation/2025/02/coca-cola-bringing-back-soda-flavor-from-80s.htmlhttps://za.pinterest.com/pin/68117013108338363/Shameless 80s Comedies (00:26:15): https://www.moviemaker.com/shameless-80s-comedies-that-just-dont-care-gallery/ Pingu (00:33:38): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5lyEqhMC6EAHotShot (00:41:28): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZeaAwQws33s Buzzfeed Song Quiz (00:58:12):#He-Man, #1980s pop culture, #nostalgia, #live-action movie, #Amazon, #Dolph Lundgren, #Skeletor, #Teela, #Camila Mendes, #Morena Baccarin, #Idris Elba, #Nicholas Galitzine, #Jared Leto, #He-Man franchise, #80s cartoons, #Coca-Cola, #Cherry Coke, #Diet Cherry Coke, #Mellow Yellow, #Irn-Bru, #Fanta, #soft drinks, #marketing strategies, #Pingu, #La Linea, #David Hasselhoff, #animated series, #anthropomorphized, #soccer movies, #Pelé, #Jimmy, #Mario Van Peebles, #bicycle kick, #championship game, #silent disco, #BuzzFeed quiz, #80s music, #entertainment industry.
Don and I spoke about many things today, not least Sugar Land Texas, Cherry Coke, Dr Pepper and how he met his wife. This episode is a story about a man who has lived a life and travelled the world, and is now writing books about the world he sees around and where he sees the future is going. We also talked about Cherry Coke, Dr Pepper, old films and what it must have been like to hitch up you wagon and head out onto the the trail. An avid writer Don tells me how he manages to be so prolific, what his secrets are to writing successfully and his ambitions for more books. The Book By Means of Peace https://a.co/d/iCp7Ipi
Today on Welcome to Cloudlandia, We start with the mysterious drone sightings over New Jersey, exploring the thin line between conspiracy and curiosity. These nocturnal aerial visitors become a metaphor for our complex modern world, where information and imagination intersect. We then investigate the profound impact of cultural icons like Mr. Beast and Kylie Jenner, examining how influence transcends traditional expertise. Our discussion reveals how public figures navigate changing landscapes of leadership and visibility, offering insights into the evolving dynamics of success and social capital. The episode concludes by challenging our approach to information consumption. Drawing from personal experiments and wisdom from thought leaders like Warren Buffett, we explore strategies for staying informed in a noisy digital ecosystem. Our conversation provides practical perspectives on navigating media, understanding cultural shifts, and maintaining perspective amid constant information flow. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS We explore the presence of drones over New Jersey, questioning whether they are linked to government surveillance or civilian activities, while considering the broader context of misinformation and conspiracy theories. Dan and I discuss the concept of anticipation being more stressful than actual experiences, suggesting it as a contributor to mental distress. The impact of cultural icons like Mr. Beast and Kylie Jenner is examined, highlighting their influence despite lacking traditional skills in their fields. We ponder on how cultural shifts are altering perceptions of corporate leadership, using a hypothetical scenario of a CEO's public safety being compromised. The dynamics of news consumption are analyzed, contrasting real-time news feeds with curated platforms like RealClear Politics to understand how they balance diverse political viewpoints. I share my experience with digital abstinence, noting the benefits of reduced distractions and the negligible impact of disconnecting from the continuous news cycle temporarily. The concept of "irrational confidence" is explored, discussing how it characterizes overachievers and can be cultivated over time to foster personal growth. We reflect on long-term investment strategies inspired by Warren Buffett, emphasizing the enduring need for certain products and industries. I consider the importance of balancing cultural awareness with the need to filter out unnecessary noise, contemplating changes in my information consumption habits. Insights from personal experiments in digital and media consumption are shared, emphasizing the importance of distinguishing between transient cultural information and lasting knowledge. Links: WelcomeToCloudlandia.com StrategicCoach.com DeanJackson.com ListingAgentLifestyle.com TRANSCRIPT (AI transcript provided as supporting material and may contain errors) Dean: Mr Sullivan. Dan: Mr Jackson are the drones looking down on you. Are the drones looking down on you. Dan: I mean, how many do you have up there? What is going? Dean: on with these drones. Dan: Yeah, I bet there's just a bunch of civilians fooling around with the government. Dean: Yeah, I wonder you know like you look at this. I think it's so. I wonder you know like you look at this. I think it's so amazing that you know we've had a theme, or I've been kind of thinking about this, with the. You know, is this the best time to be alive or the worst time to be alive? And I mentioned that I think probably in every practical way, this is the best time, but the anything in the worst time to be alive column just the speed and proliferation of, you know, conspiracies and misinformation and the battle for our minds. You know, keeping us in that. You know everything is just enough to be. You know where you're uncertain of stuff. You know there's a lot of uncertainty that's being laid out right now in every way. I mean, you look at just what's happened in the last. If we take 2020, fear you know. Dan: Well, tell me about it. I'm not very much of that 2024. Tell me about it. I experience very much of that. But why don't you tell me about that? Because I want to note some things down here. Dean: You know what? Dan: Every month, more money comes in than goes out. What more do you need to know besides that? Dean: I agree with you. I'm seeing the light here. It's just on the top level. We went through an election year which is always the you know the highly funded, you know misinformation campaigns or you know putting out there. So everybody's up on high level. Dan: Are you talking about lies Are? Dean: you talking about lies? Are you talking about lies? Who knows Dan? Dan: When I was growing up we called them lies. Why so many extra letters? I mean lies, that's a perfectly good Anglo-Saxon word. Why is Greek and Roman stuff in there? Dean: I think that's the thing, If we just simplify it. But if we bring it down to lies and truth, it's much more. Dan: I like lies and truth. Dean: Yeah, it's much more difficult to discern the lies from the truth. Dan: Yeah, he's telling a lie here, folks, his mouth is moving Exactly. Dean: You know that's the truth, but I just look at that. It's like you know the things that are. You know the things that are happening right now. Like you look at even with the government, even with the congressional hearings or announcements on, almost just like a matter of fact, oh yeah, there's aliens, there's totally aliens. There's. They've been here for a long time. We've got some in, we've got all the evidence and everything like that. But you know, carry on, it's just kind of so. It's so funny. Stuff is being like, you know, nobody really is kind of talking about it. And then you get these drone situations in New Jersey, all these drones coming out and the government saying I know nothing to see here, nothing going on there. Dan: Well, my take if you're going to be using drones. New Jersey would be my choice. You know I put drones over New Jersey. Not a lot happening there. Dean: All the memes now are that it's some highly sophisticated, you know fast food delivery service for Chris Christie. That's all the meme things. They're on a direct pipeline delivering fast food to Chris Christie. That's just so funny. Dan: Yeah, yeah. Well, you know, I mean the whole point is that civilians could do this. I mean, I think everybody probably has the you know, or certain people do have the technological capability now to put up drones, you know, and just put some lights on them and put them in the night sky I'm sure anybody does that and then you know, and then you'll be on social media. Dean: Somebody will film you and everything like that you know it's at night and they're mysterious. Dan: Always do it at night, never do it during the day You've got to use the right words to describe them too, dan, you've got to use the right words they're mysterious drones. And if you practice you can get them to fly. In formation it looks even more interesting. I'm swooping a little bit in formation, everything else, well, I don't believe there's aliens. Dean: Okay, good Everything else yeah. Well, I don't believe there's aliens, so you know I mean. Dan: I don't believe there's anything more alien than people I've already met. That's what. Dean: I mean yeah. Dan: You know I've met some alien thought forms on the part of some people. But see, I think you got to make a fundamental decision about this up front. This is worth thinking about or it's not worth thinking about. Yeah, okay, so I made the decision. It's not worth thinking about that. If something new develops, I'll probably know about it in a very short period of time, and then I can start responding to it. Yeah, but about six months ago a new resolution plunked into place in my brain, and that is I'm not going to react to an experience until I actually have the experience. Dean: So say more about that. Dan: Rather than making up a fantasy or the possibility that there's an experience to be it. Actually you're getting. I think mental illness is having an experience before you've actually being afraid of an experience before you've actually had it. It's the anticipation of having an experience that I think causes mental illness. Dean: That's true, isn't it? Dan: Yeah, I mean, that's like yeah, I haven't seen Probably not the only thing, probably not the only thing about mental illness, but I think that would qualify as an aspect. It certainly is a paranoia, certainly an aspect of paranoia, yeah, but things are moving. I think we're witnessing one of the greatest innovations in the history of the United States right now. Can I tell you what it is? Would you be interested? I'm all ears. Yeah, President is elected, and then there's this period from the day after the election until the inauguration. Dean: Yes. Dan: And it's basically been fallow. Nothing grows during that time and Trump has just decided why don't I just start acting like the president right after the election and really create a huge momentum by the time we get to the inauguration? Let's be so forceful right after the election that all the world leaders talk to me. They don't talk to the existing president. That's his name. I forget what I forget Joe, joe, joe. All right, that's the name, that's the name of the beach, that's the name of the beach, I just find it remarkable how, around the world, everybody's responding to the incoming president, not to the actual president. That's the truth. I think he's, and he's getting people. There's foreign policy changing. You know there's foreign policy, mexico, their foreign policy you know, their export import policy is changing. Canada export import policy is changing. Canada export-import policy is changing. And all he did was say a word. He said I think we're going to put a 25% tariff on both of you. And all of a sudden, they're up at night. They're up at night. Dean: I happened to be, in Toronto when all that was being announced. I happened to be in Toronto when all that was being announced and all the news was, you know, that there's an emergency meeting of all of the premiers to discuss the reaction to Donald Trump's proposed tariff. You know, you're absolutely right. Everybody's scrambling, everybody's. You know, they're definitely, you know, thinking about what's coming. You know. Dan: And then he goes to Paris for the opening of, you know, they're definitely, you know, thinking about what's coming, you know. And then he goes to Paris for the opening of, you know, the you know, the renovation of Notre Dame Cathedral. Yeah, looks good, by the way, I don't know if you've seen the pictures. It looks really good. I was in there. You know I've been to Paris, I think I've been to Paris three times and I went the first time. I said, oh, I've been to Paris, I think I've been to Paris three times and I went the first time. I said, oh, I have to go to Notre Dame Cathedral. And I went in and I said, gee, it's dark and dingy and I'm not sure they even clean. You know, clean the place anymore. And all it takes is a little fire to get everybody into cleanup mode, and boy, it looks spectacular. So Trump goes there and it's like he's the emperor of the world. You know, all the heads of state come up and they want to shake his hands and everything like that. I've never seen anything like that with an incoming president. They want to get on his good side and everybody's giving them money for his inauguration. Mark Zuckerberg's giving them money. The head of Google's giving them money for his inauguration. Mark zuckerberg's giving them money. The head of google is giving them money. Jeff bezos giving them money. Abc's giving them 15 million. That'll just go into his library library fund. Yeah, and everything else. Wow. You know, I've never seen them do this to an incoming president before. Yeah, time magazine called him the person of the year Already. I didn't even know there was a Time magazine. Dean: I'm actually thinking. I've been, I've been like thinking, dan, about my 2025, you know information plan and you know I've been kind of test driving this idea of you know, disconnecting. Where I struggle with this is that so much of the insights and things that I have are because I, on top of culture, you know, I think I'm very like tuned in to what's going on. I have a pretty broad, you know, observation of everything and that. So where I struggle with it is letting go of like at the vcr formula, for instance, was born of my observation and awareness of what's going on with mr beast and kylie jenner and these, you know, that sort of early thing of knowing and seeing what's going on you know before many of our contemporaries kind of thing. Right, many of our people are very decidedly disconnected from popular culture and don't pay attention to it. So I look at that as a balance. That part of it there's a certain amount of awareness that is an advantage for me might be affected if I were to be blissfully unaware of what's going on in culture, you know. Dan: Yeah, I don't know. I mean you could put Charlotte on to the job you know, yeah, and that's so I look at that. Charlotte. For our listeners, charlotte is Dean's AI sleuth. She finds out things. She's a sleuthy integrator of things that Dean finds interesting. You ought to talk it over with her and say how can I stop doing this and still have the benefit of it? Dean: Yeah, my thing. I think that where there might be an AI tool that I could use for this, but Charlotte, from what I understand, is bound by her latest update or whatever. She's got access to everything up to a certain date. She doesn't have real time information in terms of the most recent stuff. Have you heard, by the way, dan, what is? We're imminently away from the release of ChatGPPT 5, which is supposedly I want to get the numbers right on this. Let me just look at a text here, because it's so overwhelmingly more powerful than ChatGPT 4. The new ChatGPT5 has 10 trillion gpus compared to chat gpt4, which is 75 billion. So the difference from 75 billion to 10 trillion sounds like a pretty impressive leap. Sounds like a pretty impressive leap, and that'll put it over the top of you know, the current thing is a 121 IQ, and this will bring it to being smarter than any human on the planet. Dan: And so we don't even know, but not at doing anything particular. Dean: No, I guess not. I mean just the insight processing, logic, reasoning, all of that stuff being able to process information. I'm still amazed I was talking. Dan: When it comes out. Three months after it comes out, will you notice any difference? Dean: I don't know. Dan: That's what I'm wondering, my feeling is that I'm not even sure what cat GPT is two years after it came out, because I haven't interacted with it at all Right, I've interacted with perplexity, which I find satisfying. And you know, yeah, there's an interesting. I read an interesting article on human intelligence and it said that by and large, there's an active, practical zone to human intelligence where you're above average in confidence and you're above average in making sense of things, and it seems to be between 120 and 140. Dean: Yes, 120, 140. Dan: And about 40, 140,. Your confidence goes down as you get smarter and your awareness of making sense of things gets weaker, gets weaker. And from a standpoint of communicating with other people, the sweet zone seems to be 120 to 140. Dean: Yeah, yeah, I think you're right. I think that, yeah, yeah. Dan: You've got above average pattern, You've got above average pattern recognition and you've got good eye-hand coordination you know, in the artisans of the word that you can see something and take action on it quite quickly. You have the ability to do that, and probably in new ways, probably in new ways so you don't have a lot of friction coming the other way. You know when you do something new? yeah, but iq, you know, iq, iq is one measurement of human behavior yeah but there's many others that are more prominent, so yeah, I think this is you know, I think silicon Valley has a big fixation on IQ because they like to compare who's got the biggest. They like to compare who's got the biggest, but I'm not sure it really relates to anything useful or practical beyond a certain point. Dean: Well, it's not actionable. There's no insight in it, not like knowing that you're Colby, knowing that we're 10 quick starts is useful information. Dan: Yeah, it's like having six quick starts together with some alcohol. Right, it's a fun party. Dean: Yes, like you said your book club or your dinner clubs, our next-door neighbor our next-door neighbor's husband and wife and Shannon Waller and her husband. Dan: Our quick start out of the 60 is 56. We just have the best time for about three or four hours Good food, the wine is good and everything else. We just have the best time for about three or four hours Good food, the wine is good and everything else. And regardless of what happens transpires during those four hours, the world is completely safe from any impact. Dean: Right, exactly, it's so funny it's not going to leave the room. Yeah, everybody's safe, yeah. Dan: Go back to culture. What do you mean by culture when you say? Dean: culture. What? Dan: do you mean by culture? When you say culture, what do you mean? Dean: I mean, like popular culture, what's happening in the world right now, like having an awareness of what, because I'm a good pattern recognizer and I see and I'm overlaying things. I'm curious and alert and always looking for what's with Mr Beast and recognizing that neither one of them has any capability to do the thing that they're doing. Mr Beast didn't have the capability to make and run hamburger restaurants and Kylie didn't have any capability to run and manufacture a cosmetics company, but they both were aligned with people who had that capability and that allowed them to have a conduit from their vision, through that capability, that if they just let people know their reach that they've now got a hamburger restaurant and you can order on Uber Eats right now or you can click here to get my lip kits. You know, access to those eyeballs, that's all. So I look at that and if I had not, if I had been cut off from you know, sort of I would say I'm in the tippy top percent of people of time spent on popular culture. I guess you know, and I look at it as I look at, it's a problem in terms of a lot of time and a lot of you know that mindless stuff you would think like screen time, but all the inputs and awareness is just monitoring the signal to get and recognize patterns. You know. So I'm real. Yeah, well, let me throw you a challenge on the culture side. Dan: get and recognize patterns, you know. So I'm really sorry, yeah, well, let me throw you a challenge on the culture side. Dean: Yeah. Dan: Okay. So in New York City there's going to be a meeting of you know, I guess it's a shareholders meeting for a big health insurance company and the head of one part of the health insurance company is walking down the street. Somebody shoots him in the back and kills him, kills him the CEO, and they, yeah, they catch up with him. You know, a week later and you know he's arrested in a McDonald's in Pennsylvania and they find all sorts of incriminating evidence that he in fact is the person who was the shooter. And now he's got, you know, he's got sort of a manifesto about that. These CEOs are doing evil and even though he doesn't think that his action was an admirable action, it had to be done. I would say that's a cultural factoid because up until now being a CEO is like being an aristocrat in our capitalist society. I get a CEO and now the CEOs are trying to be invisible and they're hiring like mad new security. So all the status value of being a CEO got disappeared on an early morning sidewalk in New York City because somebody shot him. Shot him in the back, you know, I mean it wasn't a brave act, shot him in the back, but the reason is that you, as a CEO, are doing harm to large numbers of people and someone has to stop you. I would say, that's as much a cultural fact as Mr Beast or Kylie Jenner. Dean: Yeah, I mean, would you say that again? Dan: I mean, I think, every CEO in the United States. Dan: United States has instantly changed his whole schedule and how he's going to show up in public and where he's going to be seen in public where he doesn't have large amounts of security, with one action broadly communicated out through the social media and through the mainstream media. He just changed the whole way of life for CEOs. I would say that's a cultural fact. It's a negative one. You're talking about positive ones, but I believe for every positive thing you have, there's probably a corresponding negative one. I'm struck by that You're just not going to see CEOs around anymore, and I mean, half the value of being a CEO is being seen around and they just removed the whole reward for being seen around, just removed the whole reward for being seen around. Dean: Yeah, I wonder, you know like I mean. But there are certain things like other I don't know that it's all CEOs. You know, like I think, if you are perceived as the part of the vilified, you know CEOs, the almost back to Occupy Wall Street kind of things, if you're a CEO of a company that's viewed as the oppressor, like those insurance things, but I don't know if that's true for the CEOs of NVIDIA and OpenAI and Tesla, and you know what I mean. Dan: I think, if you're yeah, I wonder, but we'll see, but we'll see, we'll see. Dean: Yeah, yeah, are you the people's CEO? You know, I think. Dan: Yeah, I mean my yeah. Somebody once asked me about this, you know. They said how well known would you like to be? And I said just be below the line where I would have to have security. Dean: Right, yeah, if you look at it, can you think of anybody? Dan: I wander around Toronto on my own. I go here and I go there and everything else, and nobody knows who I am. That's my security. Dean: Nobody knows who I am yeah, but you wonder, like you know, if you look at the level of fame of you know you? You've mentioned before the difference between Warren Buffett and Mark Zuckerberg. Warren Buffett is certainly very famous, but nobody's mad at him. I guess that's part of the thing. He's very wise, or viewed as wise. Dan: He's usefully wise. Dean: Yeah, exactly. Dan: Investing according to his benchmarks and his strategies has proved very valuable to a great number of people. Dean: Agreed. Dan: Plus, he's got a fairly simple, understandable lifestyle. He still lives in the house he's lived in for the last 40 years, still drives a pickup truck and his you know the entrance to his home is filled with boxes of Diet Coke. Dean: Cherry. Dan: Coke Cherry Coke, cherry Coke. Dean: Cherry Coke, not Diet Coke. No, I'm not. That's a subject, I'm not an expert in Cherry Coke. Dan: Cherry Coke, not Diet Coke. That's a subject I'm not an expert in. Dean: That's the funniest thing. Right, that's one of my top two. Dan: Warren Buffett, you have merit badges in that area. Dean: Yeah. But I think culture, you know, I don't know, I'm trying, it's a slippery beast, this thing culture you know, it's a slippery, slippery beast and you know there's I think that's part of the thing, though it's like the zeitgeist you know is, I think, having an awareness zeitgeist gosh, you just had to slip in a german word, didn't you? Dan: you just had to get a german word, yeah I've been sort of fixated on schadenfreude for the last month. I've just been why I've just been watching the democrats respond to the election and I'm fully schadenfreude. I've been fully schadenfreid for the last month. But zeitgeist, the spirit, I think that translates into the spirit of the times. Dean: Yes, that's exactly what it is. That's what I meant by. That's what I meant by. I'm very like, I think I'm at the tippy top of the you know percentiles of people who are tuned into the zeitgeist, I think that's. I would be self-reportedly that, but yeah, and I don't know, but at the cost of there's a lot of useless stuff that gets in there as well, you know, and negative, and you're faced with all of it. So, my, my filter, I'm taking in all the sewer water kind of thing and having to filter it through rather than just, you know, pre-filtering, only drinking filtered water. Dan: You're getting rid of the fluoride drinking filtered water. Dean: You're getting rid of the fluoride. Yeah, exactly, winter haven. Florida, by the way, is one of the first in the country to be getting rid of fluoride on the oh no, this will happen really quick. Dan: Oh yeah, it was just that. Dean: I, I just said I just saw that winter haven was like one of the first movers you, you know, polk County Florida is removing and, by the way, polk County Florida is now fastest growing county in the country. So then, so there you know, 30 something, 30,000 something people that we grew by, yeah, so, new. Dan: You're to date right, you're to date Over the last 12 months, over the last 12 months. I guess that's how they measure it yeah. Dean: So my thought, dan, was that I was looking to. You know, like my tune in to the zeitgeist is on a daily, real-time basis, I'm getting the full feed, right. No, no filters. Yeah, what I was thinking. What I was wondering about was if I were to change the cadence of it to more sort of filtered content, like I would say what you do, your, you've chosen a filter called real clear politics. Right, that's your, that's your filter, and you probably have five or six other filters that are your lens through yeah, it would be the go-to every day. Dan: You know I start the morning and. I go on my computer, I go to the RealClear site. So it's. RealClear comes up as RealClear politics, but then they have about eight other RealClear channels. RealClear politics, RealClear markets, RealClear world. Realclear defense, energy, health science, you know, and everything like that. But the beauty of it is that they're aggregators of other people's output. So you know everybody's competing to get their articles on real clear. You know the New York Times competes to try to get. You know, get every day maybe one or two of its headlines, supposedly for most of my life. The most important newspaper in the world and they have to compete every day to get something of theirs onto the real clear platform. And it seems very balanced to me, right to left from politics. You know, politically, if I look at 20 headlines, I would say that five of them are real total right, five of them are total left and there's a lot of middle. There's a lot of middle about things like that, you know about things like that, you know, and then I'll punch on them, and then that takes me right to the publication or the site that produced the headline, and then I might see three or four things and I discover new ones. I discover new ones all the time. And it's good and there's a lot of filtering that's being done, but I do. They're not interpreting these articles. They're just giving you the article. You can read the article and make up your own mind about it. Now they do some editing in some cases because they interpret the headlines and they have a sidebar where there's topical areas where it's clear to me that real clear has created the headline. That's not the originating. Dean: You know the originating source of the article that's kind of like that's the drudge playbook, right yeah? Dan: I used to like drudge but he went wacky. He went wacky so I didn't read him anymore. Dean: Yeah. Dan: These guys are pretty cool. They're pretty cool. They've been going now for a dozen years anyway, as I've been aware, and they seem really cool. You know they carry advertising. That's not if I'm thinking of horses. I don't get horse ads, you know. 10 minutes later you're done. Dean: Something like that. Dan: But they do have their advertising model, but I don't, you know, I'm not interested in buying anything, so it doesn't really affect me, but that's really great. You know what's really interesting. Peter Zion, you know I'm a big fan of his. And he's got a blog and he came out about a month ago saying I'm going to put in a new approach and that is, you'll always get your free blog and video to go along with it. So it's written and then it's also got the video, but it will be a week later than when I put it on, and if you want it right away, it'll cost you this much. And I'm giving all that money to some cause. Okay, so I'm fundraising for some cause and I just went a week with no Peter Zine and then I started getting it every day and it makes no difference to me whether I got it last week or this week, okay, and so I just waited a week and I'm right up to date again as far as I'm concerned. Dean: Right yeah. Dan: Like when Syria fell. You know, the Syrian government collapsed last week and he had nothing on it until seven days later. I want to go over, but he's adjusting his format now. He says I'm going to give you four stages to what's actually happening. So you know, he's experimented with something and he's finding that he has to adjust his presentation a little bit just for people saying you know? You know, I'm going to tell you over a three-day period what happened. This happened on the first day, this happened on the second day, third day and this is where we are on the fourth day, and everything else and that's good. I like that. Everything else you know and everything, but that's part of the culture. You know it's part of the culture. Dean: Yeah. So my thought like my sense of culture. Dan: it's what culture is. Whatever's happening right now that you're interested in, yeah, it seems to show some interesting movement. Dean: Yeah, I think you're, I think you're right. I mean, my thought was of experimenting, was to go to more of a rather than a minute by minute, always on direct feed to the zeitgeist is going through a daily. You know, I had a really interesting two days at strategic coach in Toronto just a couple of weeks ago, when you know I was. I referred to it, as you know, workshopping like it was 1989 with my phone. Dan: You were practicing, practicing abstinence. Dean: Yeah, I was, and what I learned in that was, and I did it two days in a row with zero contact with the outside world, from nine o'clock to five o'clock when the workshops were going on, no checking in at the breaks or at lunch or, you know, no notifications. You know dinging while I'm in the workshops. It was certainly anchoring, you know, presence to me in the in the workshops, but also noticed that nothing really happened. You know like I didn't miss anything in that five, in that nine to five period. You know I got a bunch of emails over the day but there were maybe two or three that were like for me or of any real interest or necessity for me. You know I have two inboxes. I have a, you know, my, my dean at dean jackson. My main mailbox is monitored by, you know, people, stakeholders in the, you know, because sometimes an email will come in and if it has something to do with our realtor division, diane is in there and sees that and can respond, or Lillian is able to respond. But then I also have my own, a private email just for me, that I give to my friends, and whenever you email me, that's the email that you use and those ones are not. Those aren't seen by anybody but me. But there's even far fewer of those that come through than come into the main one. Dan: Well, it's an interesting experiment that you're doing here, because it seems to me that one is the world is changing all the time. As far as news is concerned, the world is. I guess that's what news means. You know that things are changing, but if you don't pay attention to it over a long period of time and you don't feel inconvenienced, by it then, probably, it wasn't important probably it wasn't important, yeah, you know, and like I'm in six and a half years now with no television you know right and and you know, I've gone through two, two full presidential elections without watching television and yet I don't feel that I've missed anything important by not watching television Because I have real clear politics and I have a computer and I get videos. I can go to YouTube. And if somebody's giving a talk somewhere I can watch, where on television you would never get the whole speech. You know you would be broken up with commercials and everything like that. And then you have some commentators telling you what you were supposed to think about that, which I don't really require that I'm perfectly able to understand what I'm thinking about it and everything like that. So I don't know, I don't know. Well, my thought experiment. Dean: You know what you? Dan: should do is say what kind of cultural information is sugar and what kind of cultural information is protein, I get it, and so that's kind of where I was thinking. To me that's where you're going. Dean: I'm thinking about slowing down the cadence so, and to have a daily, like you know, something like real clear and you know there's thinking about where that is filtered sort of thing for me, thinking about where that is filtered sort of thing for me. And then weekly, you know, like I think, if I just looked at, if I went to print as a thing, if I were to say, you know, time Magazine, newsweek, the Inc Magazine, people Magazine, like I think, if there were some things that I could and the Weekend Wall Street Journal, I think with those you could, that would be kind of a really good. I don't think I would miss out. Dan: I'm really big on the Weekend Wall Street Journal, I think that's a great print. That's a great print medium. I literally haven't read Time magazine. I don't know, maybe 20 years or, but it seems like they're probably on top of what's even if it's slanted, you're going to get a sense of what the core thing is. Dean: That's actually right. Yeah, I know. Dan: A lot of Democrats canceled their subscription over the last three or four days because Trump person of the year. Yeah exactly. See, now, that's an interesting piece of information, yeah yeah, what they wrote about him I don't find interesting, but the fact that certain readers they must have made him look good, you know, for that sort of cancellation, you know you know it's like this is being categorized as the kiss the ring phase. Dean: That's what abc there was being characterized. That time magazine kissed the ring by making him person of the year abc. You know, kissing the ring, giving him 15 million dollars, and well, they didn't $15 million. Dan: Well, they didn't give him $15 million, they were required to give him $15 million yeah exactly, and George Stephanopoulos has to apologize publicly for defaming him as he should. As he should, yeah, for defaming him, you know, as he should, as he should. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Dean: So Trump's got to have at least one court case. Dan: Trump's got to have at least one court case going in his favor. Dean: Yeah. Dan: Yeah. Dean: But I look at that as you know, that's a really. I think that would be a really useful thing. Would certainly get me back three or four hours a day of yeah you know, of screen time. It would give me more dean time to use, because it would certainly condense a lot of that but you have some interesting models that are, I would say, are cultural models. Dan: I would say more cheese, less whiskers is a cultural model. I mean, if you have it as a thought form, you can see, you can simplify happenings around you. You know, that seems a little bit too much whiskers, exactly, too much whiskers. Yeah, that seems like a fine new cheese. Yeah, that seems like a fine new cheese. For example, taylor Swift gave $100 million in bonuses to everybody who helped her on her tour. Dean: I don't know if you saw that. It's crazy $200 million. Dan: The truck drivers, the ones who got $100,000. They got $100,000. And her father delivered the checks. That seems like a really. That's like a fondue, that's not just cheese. Dean: That is only the finest cheese fondue. Yes, exactly, that's so funny. Dan: when they hit it big, they're real jerks and they're real pricks and she's not. She's showing gratitude. That's very much a cheese. That was a very cheesy thing for her to do. In your model, that's a very cheesy thing for her to do. Yeah, in your model, that's a very cheesy thing. Dean: Yeah, yeah, absolutely. I look at you know another thing that's happening is I don't know whether you've followed or seen what Deion Sanders has done with Colorado football over the last two seasons, but he basically went from the basement of 1-11 team the worst team in college football to the Alamo Bowl in two seasons and Travis Hunter just won the Heisman Trophy and he could quite possibly have the top two draft picks. Dan: His son didn't win the Heisman Trophy Hunter. Oh, you're saying Travis Hunter? I? Dean: was saying Travis Hunter. He could possibly have the top two picks in the NFL draft between Jadot and Travis Hunter and it's just, I mean, it fits in so perfectly with my you know, 100 week, you know timeframe there. That that's, I think, the optimal. I think you can have a really big impact in a hundred weeks on anything but to go from the basement to the bowl game is like it's a really good case study. But that really is. You know, I often I think there's so many things that play like a crystal clear vision of what he was trying to accomplish In his mind. There's no other path than them being the greatest football team, the greatest college football team in the country. That's really it. Building an empire. That's certainly where he's headed and his belief, that's the only outcome. You know it's so. I was. I read a book and, by the way, I'll have an aside on this, but I read a book years ago called Overachievement and it was a book by a sports psychologist at Rice University and his assessment of overachievers people who have achieved outsized results. One of his observations is that, without fail, they all have what he characterizes as unreasonable confidence or irrational. That's irrational confidence. That's what it is, and I thought to myself like that's a pretty interesting word pairing, because who's to say how much confidence is rational, you know, yeah, it's kind of it's it's and first of all, I. Dan: I don't think the two words even have anything to do with each other I don't either. Dean: That's why I thought it was so remarkable. You know, I think irrational confidence I mean, yeah, spoken by. Dan: spoken by someone who I thought it was so remarkable, irrational confidence. I mean spoken by someone who probably has very little. 0:46:50 - Dean: I mean interesting right Like people look at that, but I thought I've overlaid it with your four C's right Is that commitment leads to courage? Yeah, that commitment leads to courage First of all. Dan: I think it can be grown. I'm a great believer that commitment can be grown, courage can be grown, capability can be grown, confidence can be grown. It's a cycle. It's a growth cycle. It's like ambition. It's like ambition. I'm much more ambitious today than I was 30 years ago way more ambitious and 30 years ago I was 50. That's when most people are kind of are peaking out on ambition when they're 50. I mean I was in the valley 50 years ago, compared to where I am now, but I've always treated ambition as something that you can grow, and my particular approach is that the more you can tap into other people's capabilities for your projects, the more your ambition can grow. It's an interesting thing. Irrational confidence. Dean: Yeah, and I thought that you know, so it's pretty interesting. Dan: There must be a scale somewhere, you know, get on the scale, please. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Rational, oh, he's above. Rational, above irrational, oh, that's totally irrational confidence. Dean: yes, he's just setting himself up for disappointment. That's like I think're in the confidence of living to 156. That's irrational. Yeah, it is till I fail, exactly. Yeah, but that's okay, it's not going to make any difference to you. I always love your live, live, live pattern. It's not going to affect you. Dan: Live live, live, go on. Dean: I saw somebody doing an illustration, Dan, of how long it takes for the world to adapt to you not being here, and the gentleman had his finger in a glass of water and he pulled it out. Dan: Watch, yeah, watch, how long the hole lasts. Dean: It's the truth, you know, yeah, yeah. Dan: I don't know if you got a hold of that book. Same as Ever, the Morgan Household book. Dean: I did. I've read it and it's fantastic. It's good, isn't it? It really is it kind of calms you down. Dan: You know it kind of calms you down. You know I told Joe Polish I said you know how to get that guy as a speaker. I think he's great and anyway, you know he said he makes he has that one great little chapter on evolution. How long it takes, you know, like evolution, three or four million years, and he says stuff that you know is lasting over a long period of time you know is really worth paying attention to, really worth paying attention to. You know that and I find one of the things that you know at my advancing age at my advancing age is that I can see now things that were are equally true today as they were 50 years ago yeah, I see that too. Dean: Absolutely see that too. Absolutely, see that through. I'm on the cusp right now. Like you know, we're coming into 2025. And so this is the first time I started thinking about 25 years ahead was in 1999. That 25 year timeframe, you know, and certainly when I made those, you know five or three stock in. You know investment decisions. But looking back now, you know there were clues as to what is what was what was coming. But there are certainly a lot of through line to it too. You know, like I think, what I did choose was you know it's still Warren Buffett, it's still Berkshire was a great as a 10 times or more stock over 25 years. Starbucks and Procter and Gamble they're equally. Those were durable choices. But you know what was what I could have, what was there? Looking back now, the evidence was there already that Amazon and Google and Apple would have been rocket ships. You know guessing and betting, dan. It's like guessing and betting with certainty. Or you know where you think, like I think, if we look and maybe next week we can have a conversation about this the guessing and betting for the next 25 years, you know. Dan: Yeah. Dean: Yeah. Dan: I think he Warren Buffett. He said that Gillette, I like Gillette. He said I think men are going to still be shaving 25 years from now. Dean: That's what he said. That was. What was so impactful to me is that he says I can't tell which technology is going to win, even five years from now, but I know that men are going to go to bed and they're going to wake up with whiskers. Some of them are going to want to shave them off. King Gillette is going to be there, like he has been since 1850. Dan: And it's like railroads, he's very heavy into railroads. We're going to be moving things. People are still going to be moving things. Dean: I had a really good friend. Dan: Trains will still really be a good way to move things from one place to another. Dean: Isn't that funny. I had a good friend in high school. His big insight was he wanted to start a pallet company because no matter which direction things go, you're still going to need to stack them on a pallet and move them. Put my mom there. So funny which direction things go, you're still going to need to stack them on a pallet and move them, put them around there. Dan: you know so funny that pallet. They're really good. Yeah, I love it All right. All right, we're deep into the culture, we're into. It's an interesting word. It's an interesting word but anytime you talk to somebody about it, they have very specific examples that are their take on culture. And you talk to someone else and maybe culture is everybody's views on culture. Maybe that's what the culture is. Dean: Maybe, maybe, all righty. Okay, have a great day. I'll talk to you next week. Bye, bye. Dan: Okay, have a great day. I'll talk to you next week, okay, bye, bye, okay Bye.
Let's talk about the Dead Pool trophy. Also, Jimmy Carter; cramping in the jerk hand; Jeff's old man decision; the Election Night show; not forcing a fart; Brian spilled a Cherry Coke all over himself; hurricane stuff; Ethel Kennedy; Jeff just sits on his shits all day long; the other Harry Truman; “documentary filmmakers” give up on finding the Piss Bandit; Jeff is really just a cranky old guy; Joker 2; an old American bomb exploded at a Japanese airport; the Ultimate Dick Kicking Championships; and finally, the quiet quitting.
From Pop-Tarts and Cherry Coke to a holistic, anti-cancer lifestyle.Jenny Bradley shares her inspiring personal journey after being diagnosed with breast cancer in her 30's. Through a blend of conventional and holistic therapies, she found strength and hope to thrive.Jenny opens up about the emotional roller coaster of a cancer diagnosis, from the initial shock to her proactive decisions that followed. She's not just battling cancer; she's living a vibrant life through integrative approaches like IV vitamin C therapy, ozone therapy, and a plant-focused diet. Her faith and creativity have helped her continue on her path through the process of acquiring knowledge, community, and having a will to live as powerful tools in overcoming trials.Due to her story, a new passion emerged from her journey. Jenny ventured into culinary nutrition and cancer coaching, sharing her wisdom and hope with others. This episode shines a light on HealingStrong, a nonprofit organization that supports individuals facing cancer whether holistically, integratively, or conventionally, and emphasizing the power of community and faith. HealingStrong's mission is to educate, equip and empower our group leaders and group participants through their journey with cancer or other chronic illnesses, and know there is HOPE. We bring this hope through educational materials, webinars, guest speakers, conferences, community small group support and more.Please consider supporting our mission by becoming a part of our Membership Program, as a monthly donor.When you do, you will receive additional resources such as: webinars, access to ALL our past and most recent conference videos, downloadables and more, as a bonus.To learn more, head to the HealingStrong Membership Program link below: Membership Program
GUEST – Tim Lynn: Restricted flight zone for Trump over RPV when he comes to SoCal // Recapping the debate from last night. Debate betting was off the hook! // Keith Urban Album Release Party iHeartRadio Theatre giveaway // No one wants the Cherry Coke in the break room, except KiKi and Angel.
The crew had a blast selecting our favorite sodas to see which team of soft drink awesomeness will reign supreme. With heavy hitters Coke, Pepsi, Cherry Coke, Sprite, and Dr. Pepper in the lineups, the competition was fierce. Tune in the see if your favorite carbonated beverage made the cut and listen to the guys reveal what their go to drink is when good old H2O isn't enough to quench an ultimate thirst. So, sit back, pop a tab on your soda of choice and chill as the boys get fizzy with it!
We hear you Dawn Staley!
Paul Nakayama sits down with Greg and Sother to talk about Nikaido Shochu. Discovered after a twelve hour boat ride to a remote Japanese island, Paul and his wife have been importing this into the United States for the better part of a decade and they have quite a story to tell. Tune in to hear about the magic of Koji, the place it occupies in modern Japan, and how it works in cocktails and highballs. Spoiler alert, but one answer might actually be “with Cherry Coke.” Plus, the state of the world kinda sucks right now but don't worry. Greg has a plan to fix it. Follow Paul on Instagram at @paulnakayama Follow Nikaido on Instagram at @nikaido.shochu Love The Speakeasy but wish there was more? Check out Bottled in Bond, our new Patreon podcast exclusively for you, our best regulars! Join now for sponsor-free listening, video podcasts, access to pre-sales and drink recipes from all our guests. Higher proof and aged to perfection, check it out now at patreon.com/BottledinBond Don't forget to click SUBSCRIBE and RATE the show if you can.
Sabemos lo que estáis pensando: ¿sólo 4 meses de lapso entre un episodio de LTTD y el siguiente? ¿Qué es esto? ¿Sodoma y Gomorra? ¿El síndrome de lo tres chiflados? ¿Perros jugando al póker? ¿Una prueba que seguro que sale bien tipo Cherry Coke? Un poco de todo, probablemente, pero la realidad es la que es y este año ya hemos superado nuestro récord de programas anuales con dos unidades. Estamos en racha Aunque somos sinceros: dos programas ya con la mitad del año y, encima, este que nos ocupa tiene una duración menor a las tres horas. Que este aburguesamiento no os engañe, estamos optando por la táctica Marvel de cambiar todo para que nada cambie y pronto volveremos a nuestros fueros buscando el objetivo máximo en esta casa: que esto no lo escuche nadie mediante una serie de planes a cada cual más enrevesado. ¿Y qué ha motivado nuestra salida del ostracismo? Los de siempre: los descerebrados a los que Lyne Lanley contrata como empleados.Que en este caso serían aquellos y aquellas que fueron requeridos y requeridas por su majestad británica para que después la cosa quedara en eso tan usual de: «ya te llamo yo, sí eso, vengaaaa». Hablamos de esas canciones que estuvieron a punto de ser las elegidas para convertirse en las que abrieran los títulos de créditos de las películas de James Bond, pero que acabaron por ser excluidas por razones variopintas, avatares del destino o falta de la reglamentación específica en la burocracia inglesa. Y, claro, no hablamos de unos cualquiera, en esta lista contamos con Johnny Cash, Blondie, Alice Cooper, los Beach Boys o Dionne Warwick, una buena selección viene cargada de esperanzas truncadas, votos a tal y esa sensación tan humana de que «la mía era la buena, copón». Eso es, una suerte de personas que serían elegidas en último lugar para echar un partido de fútbol en el recreo que compensamos atrayendo hacia nosotros a una pléyade de colaboradores que ya hubiera querido para sí José Luis Balbín (Campillo incluido, claro) ¿Y quienes son estas nobles personas que han querido echarnos un cable de manera desinteresada y para nada forzadas por amenazas veladas (y no) contra su persona: algunos de los creadores de mejores podcast a los que puedes echarles un OHIO, como MAT de Scanners y Campamento Krypton, Francisco Nixon de Papel de Chicle o Mr. Lebrel de Con patillas y a lo loco y, también, una serie de amigos a los que admiramos tanto como para construirles un altar gracias al curso de vudú por correspondencia que pudimos hacer en CCC antes de que el Máster de Power MBA y su sistema trapezoidal empezara a engañar a tope a la peña; hablamos de David Making Time y @Kafeinomana, dos personas que convierten en día festivo el peor lunes de la historia. Todo ello acompañados de 93 canciones o temas que tienen alguna relación con la saga de James Bond (al menos en las indescifrables mentes de los pergeñadores de este podcast), la definición real de gilipollas, el sorpresivo origen de ciertas verduras y la ausencia de última hora para grabar de Lea Seydoux. Parece ser que por un tema de isquios. Eso sí, dividimos el programa en dos partes tomando como referencia los actores que se han puesto el smoking, han conducido un Aston Martin, Lotus o BMW, se han puesto peluquín, vestido de payaso o vaquero (siempre en nuestro recuerdo, Roger) o se han metido con los Beatles. Es decir, que esta primera parte corta en Panorama para matar y la siguiente abrirá con con nuestro amigo Timoteo en pleno esplendor. Con todos ustedes, Lo Tengo Todo Documentado, el único podcast que puede unir el Tatsumaki Senpukyaku con la mantequilla Tulipán sin que el Universo se pliegue en sí mismo. Demos gracias a los mangos escoceses. 🎼 Lista de canciones: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/7n6oQoFyoYro7CaoWZcDGw?si=da477ce41c534b1b ▶️ Los excluidos de James Bond - Cara A Índice: 🗣️ Intro [01:34]. 🚫 Agente 007 vs el Dr. No [09:05]. 🪆 Desde Rusia con amor [12:39]. 🎙️ MAT de «Scanners» y Led Zeppelin en: «Lo que luce la lana de cabra, tú» [16:29]. 🥇 Goldfinger [23:13]. 🎙️ Mr. Lebrel de «Con patillas y a lo loco» y Baby Woodrose en: «Para dientes de león, los de Azuqueca» [33:58]. ⚡️ Operación Trueno [37:25]. 💕 Sólo se vive dos veces [48:55]. 💂♀️ Al servicio secreto de su majestad [01:05:31]. 🎙️ Francisco Nixon de «Papel de Chicle», Richard Hawley en: «Quedamos en Coles Corner» [01:11:06]. 💎 Diamantes para la eternidad [01:18:29]. ⚰️ Vive y deja morir [01:22:32]. 🔫 El hombre de la pistola de oro [01:28:46]. 🕵️♀️ La espía que me amó [01:42:05]. 🎙️ David Making Time y Jethro Tull en: «Sweet Dreams are made of flutes» [01:51:16]. 🚀 Moonraker [01:59:12]. 👀 Sólo para sus ojos [02:08:28]. 🐙 Octupussy [02:21:13]. 🪟 Panorama para matar [02:27:59]. 🎙️ Lurilina y Robbie Williams en: «Karma de Mairena Killer» [02:25:25]. 🗣️ Despedida y hander [02:40:14].
This week the janky writing trend continues, we're done with parodying Survivor and have moved on to parodying the OJ Simpson car chase. Also, Matt and Robbie are at each other's throats for no apparent reason, Mary tries to strong arm her way into the Glen Oak fire department, and Ginger enlists Eric to help her with some sneaky business. We forgot to say what we were drinking. It was Cherry Coke and water. Exciting!Check us out on Discord: https://discord.gg/5JVVYpPPcp
Lord Richter and Lady Toast return this week just in time for Richter to lament on his lack of Cherry Coke before being reminded of the never-ending march of father time. Then we get some bad puns as they go over the character check-ins and other events of the most recent episode of II. As always, you can find us on Twitter (@inspired_incomp) and on Facebook to follow along with our exploits, you can shoot us an email at InspiredIncompetence@gmail.com if you're so inclined. You can find out more about us at InspiredIncompetence.com and join our Discord server from the link at the bottom, where we are always around to chat with our fans (or whoever wants to chat, we're not picky). Lastly, if you're enjoying the show, we humbly ask that you consider supporting us on Patreon to let us know that our efforts are not in vain. Thanks everyone, and enjoy the show!
Welcome to Chuck's Cantina Podcast where anything & everything is up from discussion. This week OG patron Patrick returns to the Cantina to discuss Wrestle Kingdom, the exit of Kevin Dunn, and Chuck's next piece. Chuck's drink: Baja Blast. Patrick's drink: Cherry Coke. You can follow the show on Facebook, Twitter, & Instagram, at @Chuckscantina for more information. To contact the show please reach out to chuckscantina@gmail.com Cheers.
This week we finish up our summer of Harrison Ford with his most recent non-franchise film: 2020's Call of the Wild. upfordebate.tv Proud member of the Coffee & Beer family of podcasts, streaming at coffeeandbeer.tv.
Finally, a movie that actually stars Harrison Ford! This week we enter the 90s action thriller era of Ford's career with 1992's Patriot Games. upfordebate.tv Twitter: @upfordebatetv Proud member of the Coffee & Beer family of podcasts, streaming at coffeeandbeer.tv.
Our summer of non-franchise Harrison Ford movies continues with 1982's Blade Runner.
This week we're continuing of summer of Harrison Ford films with 1979's The Frisco Kid. upfordebate.tv Twitter: @upfordebatetv Proud member of the Coffee & Beer family of podcasts, streaming at coffeeandbeer.tv.
We're kicking off our summer movie series covering the non- Star Wars/Indiana Jones movies starring Harrison Ford! This week we take a look at the film that first put him on the map: American Graffiti. upfordebate.tv Twitter: @upfordebatetv Proud member of the Coffee & Beer family of podcasts, streaming at coffeeandbeer.tv.
Floid Maicas presenta. Remember 90´s Radio Show #131 Programa de radio con la mejor música Dance Remember de los años 90s & 2000, presentado por Floid Maicas, en él, podrás escuchar cada semana la mejor selección musical de esta gran época dorada en las pistas de baile. 1. Suite - Torn (Dance Mix) 2. Carmine Sorrentino & Dave Carlotti Present: Miss Jane - It's A Fine Day (ATB Club Remix) 3. Scoop - Drop It (Fiocco Remix) 4. Alice Deejay - Better Off Alone (Vocal Club Mix) La sección de Dj Rusclo, "Conexion Castellón", donde cada semanita nos trae una nueva producción musical de artistas de los 90s & 2000, temazos con un sonido mas actual, en el programa 1️⃣3️⃣1️⃣ de Remember 90s con @floidmaicas podrás escuchar una nueva versión del mítico tema "No hagas el lndio, Haz el Cherokee" de Cherry Coke, el conocido refresco de sabor
This episode I review I've "I Am", Kard "Without You", Taeyang ft. Lisa "Shoong", and CLC's Yeeun " Cherry Coke".
Wed, 05 Apr 2023 03:45:00 +0000 https://jungeanleger.podigee.io/711-borsepeople-im-podcast-s6-03-lukas-stipkovich 00d93fe8dc0b315679077b6792e4cff2 Lukas Stipkovich ist Head of Research der Advisory Invest und seit rund 35 Jahren im Markt tätig. Für den Termin hat er sich ein Berkshire Hathaway Hemd angezogen und ein Cherry Coke, wie es auch Warren Buffett liebt, mitgebracht. Wir sprechen über Märkte und auch den Food, Travel & Finance Blog von Lukas. Early Stationen bei der Giro, SBC Warburg, CA IB, oder ABN Amro / RBS, und Kepler Cheuvreux sind ebenso Themen wie die aktuelle Zusammenarbeit mit Gregor Nadlinger für den Managed Profit Plus Fonds, für den Lukas Buyside Research betreibt. Der Mann, der auch Kandidat für einen Vorstandsjob in der Wiener Börse war, hat jedenfalls viele Anekdoten mitgebracht. http://www.advisoryinvest.at Managed Profit Plus Fonds , AT0000A06VB6 . https://myslowtrip.com About: Die Serie Börsepeople findet im Rahmen von http://www.audio-cd.at und dem Podcast "Audio-CD.at Indie Podcasts" statt. Es handelt sich dabei um typische Personality- und Werdegang-Gespräche. Die Season 6 umfasst unter dem Motto „23 Börsepeople“ wieder 23 Talks Presenter der Season 6 ist saisongerecht 6b47, https://6b47.com/de/home . Welcher der meistgehörte Börsepeople Podcast ist, sieht man unter http://www.audio-cd.at/people. Nach den ersten drei Seasons führte Thomas Tschol und gewann dafür einen Number One Award für 2022. Der Zwischenstand des laufenden Rankings ist tagesaktuell um 12 Uhr aktualisiert. Bewertungen bei Apple (oder auch Spotify) machen mir Freude: https://podcasts.apple.com/at/podcast/audio-cd-at-indie-podcasts-wiener-boerse-sport-musik-und-mehr/id1484919130 . 711 full no Christian Drastil Comm.
On the back of our award winning evening at The World Whisky Awards, here is an episode with Beth Whymark, Editor of Whisky Magazine and Phoebe Calver, Editor of American Whiskey Magazine. As well Editors in their fields, they are on the judging panel for The World Whisky Awards and organisers of both Whisky Live and Gin Live London. They chat about Whisky Live, their amazing magazines, The World Whisky Awards as well as Cherry Coke with Whisky and everything in between.
Martins neues Mic House-Keeping Kommentar von Heiko zu Tortillas https://kuechen-funk.de/2023/03/03/k-f-266-fastenzeit-pizza-fertig-food-von-trinkmahlzeiten-bis-tiefkuehl/#comments Authentisch Taco Essen in Deutschland? Taco Bell in Holland? Nacho Sushi... ?! https://wolt.com/de/deu/cologne/restaurant/rollz-bowlz/nacho-roll-itemid-62ab108e82d60cab833a52b1 Franzbrötchen selber machen https://www.instagram.com/p/Cp91ZH2gaCf/ Köln Mülheim? Warum ist da nix los? The Ash - Burger Restaurant? Five Guys Cajun Fries & Milchshake MHD Podcast! Folge Paris http://mhdpodcast.de/ Fastenzeit ohne Alkohol - erstes Fazit Siegfried Alkoholfrei Rose - nicht so prall https://amzn.to/40LsQa1 Gordon's Alkoholfrei 0.0% https://amzn.to/3JYJn3E Kalorien Cola? Cherry Coke ist lecker! Mate Drops https://de.dropz.com/ Bier-Pulver??? Alkoholpulver https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alkoholpulver Die Bärlauch Zeit geht los https://www.instagram.com/p/CqTR5tUstRf/ Nduja Pizza https://www.instagram.com/p/CqOWYKLAYvh/ Nduja Pasta https://www.instagram.com/p/CqBSGkBMfSX/ Kitchen im Possible is Back! Folge mit den Stembergs Kokosmilch selber machen Nervt: Alle Köche sind beschissen, die sich nicht zu helfen wissen. Königingen Pastete Toll Rezepte: Aubergine mit Schokolade Francesinha https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francesinha Schweineblase Cacio e Pepe Tim Melzer Podcast - Fiete Gastro - Folge mit Freddy https://plus.rtl.de/podcast/fiete-gastro-der-auch-kulinarische-podcast-payump5t64p6q/98-essen-ist-fetisch-mit-sturmwaffel-cbfrjysat12yf Folge mit Billy Wagner https://plus.rtl.de/podcast/fiete-gastro-der-auch-kulinarische-podcast-payump5t64p6q/94-billy-und-die-boys-mit-billy-wagner-ixt0litb7j9n5 The Menü Film! https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Menu The Bear Staffel 2 - im Juni!
OTB's John Duggan is joined by producer Aidan Delaney and newsreader Cameron Hill to discuss the day's sporting stories and the fallout of Gary Linker stepping away from Match of the Day.
The Eiffel Tower, The Space Needle, Monorails, Video Calling, The Ferris Wheel, Broadcast TV, X-Rays. Now that may seem like a random assortment of things but I shit you not, each of those Monuments, Inventions, Technology, were first revealed at a World's Fair. It doesn't end there....Do you like Hamburgers? Cherry Coke? The Ice Cream cone. All of these were either invented for or made their debut at a World's Fair as well. Okay enough reading just hit the play button and be amazed at how much shit you didn't know about The World's Fair...and yes it's still going on today.
In our most recent installment, Mike Varley (one half of the artistic duo Highley Varlet) has (half of) us over to his very official podcast studio (in his apartment) to discuss his and their artistic endeavors including the “2020: Total Clarity” project where they walked a marathon a day, five days a week, for a full calendar year, the people they met, the podcast episodes they produced, the bagels they ate, the weed bags they picked up, the subsequent NFT collections they produced and how this all helped him to broaden his understanding of New York City, create community, and think about the definition of the word “artist.” Mike Varley has recently returned to the craft of 'About-Me' writing after a number of years that will henceforth be known as "About-less." He's become aware through querying his senses that writing a bio two days before the end of a calendar year will garishly color the contents to the tune of Auld Lang Syne. Nevertheless, he has opened a Cherry Coke for the occasion despite the fact it is neither the time of day nor the will of God. 18 months ago, Mike walked seven thousand and twenty four miles around the 5 boroughs of New York City - roughly four thousand, two hundred and sixteen of those with his now wife Jessi Highet. He has spent most days since reliving the experience via digital documentation, a testament to his dedication to never settle on an evident trajectory. Recently he's learned that the act of entertaining, scheduling, performing, and supplementing radio, newsprint and television interviews is a surprisingly time consuming task but worth the effort if you get to meet Al Roker. Please don't bite Mike Varley, he has no patience for doctors. If you must know, Mike Varley has made feature films, novellas, music videos, Halloween masks, electrical cord paintings, Triple-A video games, podcasts, audio books, and, this one time, a tiny hut made out of no more than 20 cotton swabs. He is pleased to have kept this brief. Podcast Bonus Special: If you'd like to receive a free promo NFT from Highley Varlets “Weed Bags of New York” project, email us at info@lydianstater.co, with your Ethereum wallet address and we will send you one. Links 2020: Total Clarity Highley Varlet on The Today Show Everything is Everything Weed Bags of New York mikevarley.com @highleyvarlet
Welcome to the latest fizztacular episoda of Totally TIDRP as Gaz screams into the void hoping someone will hear him as he talks about something very dear to his heart. Fizzy drinks! Tidrp@gmail.com
Homily for Christmas Day, 2022
(00:00) Alright(00:10) Guest Host Colin: Mike C.'s tour manager(06:45) Star Wars (07:27) Disney+: Andor(09:40) In Theaters: Black Adam(21:04) Prime: The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power(25:00) George has read books: The Notebook, Harry Potter, Twilight(27:10) Fake Snack of the Day: Kit Kat Minis(28:19) Real Snack of the Day: Ruffles Flamin' Hot BBQ and Cherry Coke(32:43) Congratulations to Ice-T(33:22) Colin loves Hulu: General Hospital(36:15) Showtime: Happyish(39:36) Roku: The Black Donnellys(42:57) AD from our Sponsors: Hudson River Hemp(44:08) Disney+: Hocus Pocus 2(44:50) Netflix: The Curse of Bridge Hollow(46:52) Netflix: The School for Good and Evil(48:57) Episode Recap: Thank you to our guest host Colin, Andor, Black Adam, The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, General Hospital, Fullmetal Alchemist, Happyish, The Black Donnellys, Hocus Pocus 2, The Curse of Bridge Hollow, The School for Good and Evil(53:31) Thank you for supporting your local podcastMake sure to follow us on IG and Twitter @ExStream_Team_
From deep discussions about approaching the work day, to advice on raising those little ones, to more thoughts on leadership, our very different “perfect” weekends, and flashbacks to 1992--- we'll have you thinking, reflecting, and laughing on this one. Grab a cushion and squish in! You are welcome here. Show notes: On the tens, Rachel or Monica (Friends reference) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0108778/, M&M Bake Shop https://www.facebook.com/MM-Bake-Shop-682312638478495/, Lorenzo's (Frostburg, MD) https://www.facebook.com/lorenzosbakery/, Dunkin' Donuts https://www.dunkindonuts.com/en, Dunkin' commercial from 1992 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9lXBTmjaGs What is the most underrated quality of a good leader? From what you know now what advice might you give to parents of toddlers and preschoolers?, Play-doh https://playdoh.hasbro.com/en-us, Burger King https://www.bk.com/, Deep Creek Lake, MD https://deepcreeklake.com/, Adam Rubin https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/authors/227133/adam-rubin/, Those Darn Squirrels https://www.amazon.com/Those-Darn-Squirrels-Adam-Rubin/dp/0547576811, Dragons Love Tacos https://www.dragonslovetacos.com/about, The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle https://eric-carle.com/eric-carle-book-gallery/the-very-hungry-caterpillar-1969/, Little Golden Books http://www.littlegoldenbooks.com/ In your opinion, what is the difference between getting to go to work and having to go to work? Puff Daddy/ Sean ‘Diddy' Combs https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0004835/, If your schedule magically cleared itself for an entire weekend how would you spend your time? Washington Commanders https://www.commanders.com/, Dallas Cowboys https://www.dallascowboys.com/, WDW https://disneyworld.disney.go.com/, Enneagram 3 https://www.enneagraminstitute.com/type-3, Cherry Coke https://us.coca-cola.com/products/coca-cola-flavors/cherry, Peanut butter M&Ms https://www.mms.com/, Old Bay https://www.mccormick.com/old-bay, While You Were Sleeping https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0114924/, Gilmore Girls https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0238784/, Chick-fil-A https://www.chick-fil-a.com/, Lauren Daigle https://laurendaigle.com/, Toby Mac https://tobymac.com/#/, Master Kevin Kowalczik https://www.karate.com/fighters/kevin-kowalczik, Revolution Martial Arts https://coloradokicks.com/, https://crocodilemartialarts.com.au/instructors/anthony-hockley/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
The Buffer Bros. Restaurants. Salmon. Poppyseed Chicken. Cream of Wheat. Beans. Cherry Coke. PCB.
Episode 107 features Vestal Vodka, Polish Potato Vodka. Bottled in 750ml at 40% ABV, or 80 proof. There are three options covered, the Unfiltered 2015 Vintage that retails for $28. Next is the standard or "white label" that retails for $20. Last is the Black Cherry that retails for $21. Enjoy this episode with any of the Vestal Vodkas you can get your hands on! The official website for Vestal Vodka: https://www.vestalvodka.com/ (https://www.vestalvodka.com/ ) Brief Historical Timeline: Early 1990s - William Borrell's father buys a farm in Poland 2009 - The Borrell's grow a crop of potatoes on their Polish farm and have it distilled into vodka 2010 - This first version of their vodka earns a perfect score on Difford's Guide 2020 - Halewood, a UK based spirits producer, purchases 48% of Vestal forming a partnership 2021 - TotalWine begins distributing Vestal Vodka in the USA, including all of the available Unfiltered 2015 Vintage 2022 - The brand is hitting it's stride, growing distribution while staying true to their traditional production methods Key Cocktails: It depends upon which version of Vestal you're drinking, but for the Unfiltered 2015 Vintage, let its flavor shine. The standard or "white label" is well suited for any vodka cocktail. The Black Cherry? Use it for flavor, recommended to be mixed with Coke for an alcoholic Cherry Coke. References: My interview with William Borrell, founder of Vestal Vodka. https://chilledmagazine.com/vestal-vodka-qa-with-william-borrell/ (Chilled Magazine Article on Vestal Vodka) https://www.thespiritsbusiness.com/2020/08/a-drink-with-william-borrell-vestal-vodka/ (The Spirits Business Article Featuring William Borrell) https://www.thespiritsbusiness.com/2020/01/halewood-buys-48-stake-in-vestal-vodka/ (The Spirits Business Article on Halewood Partnering with Vestal) https://www.vice.com/en/article/bjqgw5/the-mythical-polish-moonshine-that-apparently-leaves-no-hangover (Vice Article on Polish Moonshine) https://ladiesandgents.co/ (The Ladies & Gents Bar) https://www.insidehook.com/article/booze/vestal-vodka-review (Inside Hook Review) Contact Information: Official show website is: https://www.liquorandliqueurconnoisseur.com/ (www.liquorandliqueurconnoisseur.com) Join my mailing list: http://eepurl.com/hfyhHf (http://eepurl.com/hfyhHf) Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/liquorandliqueurconnoisseur (https://www.facebook.com/liquorandliqueurconnoisseur) Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/LiquorandLiqueurConnoisseur/ (https://www.instagram.com/LiquorandLiqueurConnoisseur/) Twitter: @LLConnoisseur
In this edition of the Wild World of Pepsi we look at Cherry Pepsi…I mean Wild Cherry Pepsi…no, I mean Pepsi Wild Cherry and learn the history on the highly popular drink.
Listen in as the JERKS explain why “everything is monkey, and everything is candy baby!” Partake in Part I as we talk Cherry Coke ransomed notes, Nazi K-Mart's free mugs, and how thin the Soup President's broth really was… “I said jouked!” “Twitter is the Talking Toilet of the Internet.” “Ike spit that nickel out!” #Figures
Tim finally unveils a warm and friendly cocktail long in development!KALPY CORDIAL RECIPE1.5oz/45ml Spiced RumTop up with Cherry CokePour rum in an old fashioned glass filled with ice. Top with Cherry Coke. Garnish or float in a manner that reflects your own personal styleez.Recipe via Tim Kalpakis Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Lauren and Emily discuss the events of February 15-March 6 throughout history: Dolly Parton's workers' anthem, the Waco siege, the shooting of Larry Flint, Cherry Coke vs. Roy Rogers, and more!(Music by Karl Casey @ White Bat Audio)
The crew revives Gerry, felled by a sleep dart, and takes off after Preppy Brian in order to save Bigfoot and make it to Percy's birthday party! Dungeons and Drama Nerds is produced by Todd Brian Backus, Percival Hornak, and Nicholas Orvis, and is mixed and edited by Anthony Sertel Dean. Our Oh Dang! Bigfoot Stole my Car with my Friend's Birthday Present Inside game features Jon Jon Johnson as the GM, Christopher Diercksen as Hank McGruff, Mieko Gavia as Chet Daystar, Susan W. Rodgers as Helma Shrinkley, and Shannon Wade as Geraldine “Gerrie” Winters. Oh Dang! Bigfoot… was written by Paul Matijevic. Find us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram @DnDramaNerds, check out cast bios on our website, dungeonsanddramanerds.com/, and tune in next week for another episode of Dungeons and Drama Nerds!
Family dynamics and faith take center stage in this week's episode. We'll hear about how Amber's family relationships helped her grow and start to see her faith in a new light. Common Threads: Family, Siblings, LGBTQIA, Podcast Pairings(TM): This week's episode can best be enjoyed with a Cherry Coke and Cool Ranch Doritos. Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this podcast are solely those of the hosts and guests. They do not reflect the opinions or views of their employers.
Meet Mi Duole team member, Dr. Dan Thunell, and enjoy his bio from his wife Meg
Mike, Kenny, and special guest, Stephan Stansfield, conduct in-the-moment research to decide what the GOAT coke actually is. They conduct a taste test of Coca-Cola Classic, Diet Coke, Cherry Coke, Vanilla Coke, Cherry-Vanilla Coke, and, of course, Pepsi Mango.
“I Only Have Eyes For You” by The Flamingos plays as Debbie and Terry enjoy their drinks before making out (or at least trying to). Megan Coleman from MASH Minute joins Tierney to talk about cardigan clips, bad decisions by Terry onscreen and George Lucas offscreen, and some other movies that used this song in their soundtrack.Come hang out at Mel's Listeners' Drive In on Facebook and @vcrprivileges on Twitter and InstagramArtwork by Alex RobinsonMusic by Chris Frain
We never know where marketing lessons with Dill are going to go, but one thing is guaranteed - there will be takeaways that can be used in business today. The Cherry Coke/Sega Sonic Shuttle started in 1993 and was so successful that it was repeated the following two years, 1994 & 1995. 33 markets, 1.74 million samples, 800,000 Sega Sonic game plays, and over 1 million incremental media mentions. This marketing program is an old idea that would be great in today's world as people are starving for human touch now more than ever. In this episode, we urge you to be creative about how you approach using physical marketing tools and where you find them - new is not always better, there are ways to bring old assets back to life that can be even more meaningful to audiences than something new.
As broadcast March 31, 2021 with extra mileage to get all the tunes in on the podcast version. For our final program of March during a severely dusty week here in Korea, we took a trip to the sky blue country down south & fairest Buenos Aires to soak in some of the tunes that make this such a musically rich country. Whether it's the early rock sounds of Los Gatos or the modern tango joints from the likes of Otras Aires, narrowing all of it down to an hour and a half was not easy. Although we were without Barbora this week, it was a tremendous trip. #feelthegravityTracklisting:Part I (00:00)David Bowie – Unwashed & Somewhat Slightly DazedManal – Casa Con Diez PinosLos Aggrotones – El Reggae Es Algo SerioPilar Padin – PorvenirFlorencia Andrada – Por AmorLos Negronis – RingoPart II (33:36)Delfina Campos – El AstronautaClara Cava – Dias de PajaPiero – Fumemos un CigarilloLos Gatos – Viento, Dile a la LluviaJuana Molina – ErasAlmendra – A Estos Hombres TristesPart III (60:50)Pilar Padin – Igual a EllosManal – No PibeLos Gatos – La BalsaLos Abuelos De La Nada – Mil HorasOtros Aires – Los VinoElectro Dub Tango – CanopusPart IV (90:52)Cherry Coke – Like I DoCherry Coke – Wash oceanfromtheblue ft BLOO – girlCrush - OHIOpunchnello – Blue HawaiiCar, the garden – Lean On You
Let's talk about today, and this week!
In today's flagship Lions of Liberty podcast, host Marc Clair is joined by fellow Californiatarians Michael Boldin of the Tenth Amendment Center and LNC Chair candidate Joshua Smith for Libertarians in Living Rooms...drinking Cherry Coke and vaping CBD. Ok, so Marc is the only one drinking for this one, but we had a blast discussing the Libertarian Party, antiwar messaging, how libertarians can build coalitions while staying philosophically bold and consistent, and so much more! For show notes head over to LionsOfLiberty.com/434 Help us launch this show to a whole new level in 2020 by joining the Lions of Liberty Pride and supporting this show on Patreon ! Add "Sounds Like Liberty" to your podcast rotation today! Considering joining the Libertarian Party? If so, do so through our affiliate link at LP.org/LionsOfLiberty and help the Lions of Liberty at the same time! Take a mere 15 minutes of your day to watch "...and Live Free!" The Lions of Liberty Story. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Menudo puñado de megamixazos os traigo hoy. Para empezar el Zona Roja, una excusa de Quality Madrid para sacar en CD su éxito revelación del verano del 95, el Cherry Coke. Escucharemos también la segunda y última entrega del Currupipi Mix, un proyecto de Code Music mezclado en la clandestinidad por el Dream Team. Ya en el año 2000, sale el segundo Ibiza Mix lanzado por Blanco y Negro Music, que se había hecho con esta exitosa marca tras el cierre de Max Music al finalizar 1998. Y además escucharemos los megamixes del Todo Éxitos '97, Ziritionemix, Internet Mix, Máquina Total y ACTV En Directo.
Billionaire mogul Warren Buffett has embarked on a new venture to introduce Cherry Coke to China. The guys reflect on some of his other ventures and tell you how you might struggle to buy furniture from a company that isn't owned by him. Listen to Pat & Stu for FREE on TheBlaze Radio Network from 5p-7p ET, Mon. through Fri. www.theblaze.com/radio Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
REPOST SEPTEMBER 14, 2016: Bill Frost (Salt Lake City Weekly & X96) and Tommy Milagro (a comedy dive near you) talk Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll and Tyrant: RIP at FX, South Park Season 20, Kirstie Alley on Scream Queens, Fear the Walking Dead, The Punisher in 2018, Westworld, Keith Olbermann on GQ TV, 2016 Emmy Awards nominees, Rasslin' News, weirdest Adult Swim one-offs and What to Watch Harder (Ballers, Vice Principals, Fear the Walking Dead, From Dusk Till Dawn, Mary + Jane, You're the Worst, Dark Matter, Mr. Robot, Queen of the South, Better Things, Atlanta, Quarry, High Maintenance, American Horror Story, Lucha Underground, Documentary Now!, Z Nation, Ray Donovan, The Get Down and Casual). Drinking: Cherry Rummies made with Cherry Coke and rum from OFFICIAL TV Tan sponsor Outlaw Distillery.
This week on TBASH - Psychic Andy pours a few with the one the only...BDT!!! Topics include: Dirty Chai Tea, Cherry Colas, IPAs, Bourbon, and drinking Gravity Bong Water mixed with ________ . This weeks shootout: Cherry Coke Vs Wild Cherry Pepsi Vs Cherry Coke Zero!