Podcasts about cmi

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Ykkösaamu
Maistuvatko hallituksen kasvulääkkeet ay-liikkeelle ja elinkeinoelämälle?

Ykkösaamu

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2025 50:04


Valtion työntekijöitä, kuten poliiseja, on parhaillaan toistamiseen lakossa - ja kolmannesta lakosta on varoitettu. Mitä lakkoilijat tavoittelevat? Haastattelussa vanhempi yliopistonlehtori Mika Helander Åbo Akademista. Hallituksen puoliväliriihi jatkuu tänään. Mitä tavoitelluista kasvutoimenpiteistä ajattelevat ammattiyhdistysliike ja elinkeinoelämä? Vierainamme Akavan puheenjohtaja Maria Löfgren ja EK:n toimitusjohtaja Jyri Häkämies. Aselepoa Ukrainaan tunnustellaan jälleen tänään Yhdysvaltain johdolla, tällä kertaa Lontoossa. Millaisista asioista neuvotellaan? Ukrainasta Kiovasta raportoi toimittaja Justas Stasevskij. Keskustelemassa Ulkopoliittisen instituutin tutkija Tyyne Karjalainen ja vanhempi asiantuntija Mikko Patokallio konfliktinratkaisujärjestö CMI:stä. Ruotsin kruununprinsessa Victoria on Suomessa, jonka teemana on kokonaispuolustus ja kriisivalmius. Vierailun ohjelmasta ja merkityksestä kertoo toimittaja Nina Svahn. Juontaja Linda Vettanen, toimittajat Petra Nykänen ja Markus Liimatainen, tuottaja Anna-Maria Haarala.

Monocle 24: The Monocle Daily
Xi Jinping tours Southeast Asia and European travellers cancel US trips

Monocle 24: The Monocle Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 39:48


US president Donald Trump hosts his El Salvador counterpart, Nayib Bukele, as his influence in Central America grows. Also on the programme: Xi Jinping seeks to strengthen economic ties as he tours Southeast Asia and European travellers turn their backs on trips to the US. Then: why we’re addicted to bad news as our love of ‘doomscrolling’ continues. Plus: we speak to Dr Janne Taalas, CEO of the CMI – Martti Ahtisaari Peace Foundation.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Bob Enyart Live

Listen in as Real Science Radio host Fred Williams and co-host Doug McBurney review and update some of Bob Enyart's legendary list of not so old things! From Darwin's Finches to opals forming in months to man's genetic diversity in 200 generations, to carbon 14 everywhere it's not supposed to be (including in diamonds and dinosaur bones!), scientific observations simply defy the claim that the earth is billions of years old. Real science demands the dismissal of the alleged million and billion year ages asserted by the ungodly and the foolish.     * Finches Adapt in 17 Years, Not 2.3 Million: Charles Darwin's finches are claimed to have taken 2,300,000 years to diversify from an initial species blown onto the Galapagos Islands. Yet individuals from a single finch species on a U.S. Bird Reservation in the Pacific were introduced to a group of small islands 300 miles away and in at most 17 years, like Darwin's finches, they had diversified their beaks, related muscles, and behavior to fill various ecological niches. Hear about this also at rsr.org/spetner.  * Finches Speciate in Two Generations vs Two Million Years for Darwin's Birds?  Darwin's finches on the Galapagos Islands are said to have diversified into 14 species over a period of two million years. But in 2017 the journal Science reported a newcomer to the Island which within two generations spawned a reproductively isolated new species. In another instance as documented by Lee Spetner, a hundred birds of the same finch species introduced to an island cluster a 1,000 kilometers from Galapagos diversified into species with the typical variations in beak sizes, etc. "If this diversification occurred in less than seventeen years," Dr. Spetner asks, "why did Darwin's Galapagos finches [as claimed by evolutionists] have to take two million years?" * Opals Can Form in "A Few Months" And Don't Need 100,000 Years: A leading authority on opals, Allan W. Eckert, observed that, "scientific papers and textbooks have told that the process of opal formation requires tens of thousands of years, perhaps hundreds of thousands... Not true." A 2011 peer-reviewed paper in a geology journal from Australia, where almost all the world's opal is found, reported on the: "new timetable for opal formation involving weeks to a few months and not the hundreds of thousands of years envisaged by the conventional weathering model." (And apparently, per a 2019 report from Entomology Today, opals can even form around insects!) More knowledgeable scientists resist the uncritical, group-think insistence on false super-slow formation rates (as also for manganese nodules, gold veins, stone, petroleum, canyons and gullies, and even guts, all below). Regarding opals, Darwinian bias led geologists to long ignore possible quick action, as from microbes, as a possible explanation for these mineraloids. For both in nature and in the lab, opals form rapidly, not even in 10,000 years, but in weeks. See this also from creationists by a geologist, a paleobiochemist, and a nuclear chemist. * Blue Eyes Originated Not So Long Ago: Not a million years ago, nor a hundred thousand years ago, but based on a peer-reviewed paper in Human Genetics, a press release at Science Daily reports that, "research shows that people with blue eyes have a single, common ancestor. A team at the University of Copenhagen have tracked down a genetic mutation which took place 6-10,000 years ago and is the cause of the eye color of all blue-eyed humans alive on the planet today." * Adding the Entire Universe to our List of Not So Old Things? Based on March 2019 findings from Hubble, Nobel laureate Adam Riess of the Space Telescope Science Institute and his co-authors in the Astrophysical Journal estimate that the universe is about a billion years younger than previously thought! Then in September 2019 in the journal Science, the age dropped precipitously to as low as 11.4 billion years! Of course, these measurements also further squeeze the canonical story of the big bang chronology with its many already existing problems including the insufficient time to "evolve" distant mature galaxies, galaxy clusters, superclusters, enormous black holes, filaments, bubbles, walls, and other superstructures. So, even though the latest estimates are still absurdly too old (Google: big bang predictions, and click on the #1 ranked article, or just go on over there to rsr.org/bb), regardless, we thought we'd plop the whole universe down on our List of Not So Old Things!   * After the Soft Tissue Discoveries, NOW Dino DNA: When a North Carolina State University paleontologist took the Tyrannosaurus Rex photos to the right of original biological material, that led to the 2016 discovery of dinosaur DNA, So far researchers have also recovered dinosaur blood vessels, collagen, osteocytes, hemoglobin, red blood cells, and various proteins. As of May 2018, twenty-six scientific journals, including Nature, Science, PNAS, PLoS One, Bone, and Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, have confirmed the discovery of biomaterial fossils from many dinosaurs! Organisms including T. Rex, hadrosaur, titanosaur, triceratops, Lufengosaur, mosasaur, and Archaeopteryx, and many others dated, allegedly, even hundreds of millions of years old, have yielded their endogenous, still-soft biological material. See the web's most complete listing of 100+ journal papers (screenshot, left) announcing these discoveries at bflist.rsr.org and see it in layman's terms at rsr.org/soft. * Rapid Stalactites, Stalagmites, Etc.: A construction worker in 1954 left a lemonade bottle in one of Australia's famous Jenolan Caves. By 2011 it had been naturally transformed into a stalagmite (below, right). Increasing scientific knowledge is arguing for rapid cave formation (see below, Nat'l Park Service shrinks Carlsbad Caverns formation estimates from 260M years, to 10M, to 2M, to it "depends"). Likewise, examples are growing of rapid formations with typical chemical make-up (see bottle, left) of classic stalactites and stalagmites including: - in Nat'l Geo the Carlsbad Caverns stalagmite that rapidly covered a bat - the tunnel stalagmites at Tennessee's Raccoon Mountain - hundreds of stalactites beneath the Lincoln Memorial - those near Gladfelter Hall at Philadelphia's Temple University (send photos to Bob@rsr.org) - hundreds of stalactites at Australia's zinc mine at Mt. Isa.   - and those beneath Melbourne's Shrine of Remembrance. * Most Human Mutations Arose in 200 Generations: From Adam until Real Science Radio, in only 200 generations! The journal Nature reports The Recent Origin of Most Human Protein-coding Variants. As summarized by geneticist co-author Joshua Akey, "Most of the mutations that we found arose in the last 200 generations or so" (the same number previously published by biblical creationists). Another 2012 paper, in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology (Eugenie Scott's own field) on High mitochondrial mutation rates, shows that one mitochondrial DNA mutation occurs every other generation, which, as creationists point out, indicates that mtEve would have lived about 200 generations ago. That's not so old! * National Geographic's Not-So-Old Hard-Rock Canyon at Mount St. Helens: As our List of Not So Old Things (this web page) reveals, by a kneejerk reaction evolutionary scientists assign ages of tens or hundreds of thousands of years (or at least just long enough to contradict Moses' chronology in Genesis.) However, with closer study, routinely, more and more old ages get revised downward to fit the world's growing scientific knowledge. So the trend is not that more information lengthens ages, but rather, as data replaces guesswork, ages tend to shrink until they are consistent with the young-earth biblical timeframe. Consistent with this observation, the May 2000 issue of National Geographic quotes the U.S. Forest Service's scientist at Mount St. Helens, Peter Frenzen, describing the canyon on the north side of the volcano. "You'd expect a hard-rock canyon to be thousands, even hundreds of thousands of years old. But this was cut in less than a decade." And as for the volcano itself, while again, the kneejerk reaction of old-earthers would be to claim that most geologic features are hundreds of thousands or millions of years old, the atheistic National Geographic magazine acknowledges from the evidence that Mount St. Helens, the volcanic mount, is only about 4,000 years old! See below and more at rsr.org/mount-st-helens. * Mount St. Helens Dome Ten Years Old not 1.7 Million: Geochron Laboratories of Cambridge, Mass., using potassium-argon and other radiometric techniques claims the rock sample they dated, from the volcano's dome, solidified somewhere between 340,000 and 2.8 million years ago. However photographic evidence and historical reports document the dome's formation during the 1980s, just ten years prior to the samples being collected. With the age of this rock known, radiometric dating therefore gets the age 99.99999% wrong. * Devils Hole Pupfish Isolated Not for 13,000 Years But for 100: Secular scientists default to knee-jerk, older-than-Bible-age dates. However, a tiny Mojave desert fish is having none of it. Rather than having been genetically isolated from other fish for 13,000 years (which would make this small school of fish older than the Earth itself), according to a paper in the journal Nature, actual measurements of mutation rates indicate that the genetic diversity of these Pupfish could have been generated in about 100 years, give or take a few. * Polystrates like Spines and Rare Schools of Fossilized Jellyfish: Previously, seven sedimentary layers in Wisconsin had been described as taking a million years to form. And because jellyfish have no skeleton, as Charles Darwin pointed out, it is rare to find them among fossils. But now, reported in the journal Geology, a school of jellyfish fossils have been found throughout those same seven layers. So, polystrate fossils that condense the time of strata deposition from eons to hours or months, include: - Jellyfish in central Wisconsin were not deposited and fossilized over a million years but during a single event quick enough to trap a whole school. (This fossil school, therefore, taken as a unit forms a polystrate fossil.) Examples are everywhere that falsify the claims of strata deposition over millions of years. - Countless trilobites buried in astounding three dimensionality around the world are meticulously recovered from limestone, much of which is claimed to have been deposited very slowly. Contrariwise, because these specimens were buried rapidly in quickly laid down sediments, they show no evidence of greater erosion on their upper parts as compared to their lower parts. - The delicacy of radiating spine polystrates, like tadpole and jellyfish fossils, especially clearly demonstrate the rapidity of such strata deposition. - A second school of jellyfish, even though they rarely fossilized, exists in another locale with jellyfish fossils in multiple layers, in Australia's Brockman Iron Formation, constraining there too the rate of strata deposition. By the way, jellyfish are an example of evolution's big squeeze. Like galaxies evolving too quickly, 

america university california world australia google earth science bible washington france space real nature africa european writing philadelphia australian evolution japanese dna minnesota tennessee modern hawaii wisconsin bbc 3d island journal nbc birds melbourne mt chile flash mass scientists abortion cambridge increasing pacific conservatives bone wyoming consistent generations iceland ohio state instant wired decades rapid nobel national geographic talks remembrance maui yellowstone national park wing copenhagen grand canyon chemical big bang nova scotia nbc news smithsonian secular daily mail telegraph arial temple university groundbreaking screenshots 2m helvetica papua new guinea charles darwin 10m variants death valley geology jellyfish american journal geo nps national park service hubble north carolina state university steve austin public libraries cambridge university press missoula galapagos geographic organisms mojave diabolical forest service aig darwinian veins mount st tyrannosaurus rex new scientist lincoln memorial helens plos one galapagos islands shri inky cambrian cmi human genetics pnas live science science daily canadian arctic opals asiatic spines canadian broadcasting corporation finches rsr park service two generations 3den unintelligible spirit lake junk dna space telescope science institute carlsbad caverns archaeopteryx fred williams ctrl f 260m nature geoscience from creation vertebrate paleontology 2fjournal from darwin physical anthropology eugenie scott british geological survey 3dtrue larval 252c adam riess bob enyart ctowud raleway oligocene 3dfalse jenolan caves ctowud a6t real science radio allan w eckert kgov
Real Science Radio

Listen in as Real Science Radio host Fred Williams and co-host Doug McBurney review and update some of Bob Enyart's legendary list of not so old things! From Darwin's Finches to opals forming in months to man's genetic diversity in 200 generations, to carbon 14 everywhere it's not supposed to be (including in diamonds and dinosaur bones!), scientific observations simply defy the claim that the earth is billions of years old. Real science demands the dismissal of the alleged million and billion year ages asserted by the ungodly and the foolish.   * Finches Adapt in 17 Years, Not 2.3 Million: Charles Darwin's finches are claimed to have taken 2,300,000 years to diversify from an initial species blown onto the Galapagos Islands. Yet individuals from a single finch species on a U.S. Bird Reservation in the Pacific were introduced to a group of small islands 300 miles away and in at most 17 years, like Darwin's finches, they had diversified their beaks, related muscles, and behavior to fill various ecological niches. Hear about this also at rsr.org/spetner.  * Finches Speciate in Two Generations vs Two Million Years for Darwin's Birds?  Darwin's finches on the Galapagos Islands are said to have diversified into 14 species over a period of two million years. But in 2017 the journal Science reported a newcomer to the Island which within two generations spawned a reproductively isolated new species. In another instance as documented by Lee Spetner, a hundred birds of the same finch species introduced to an island cluster a 1,000 kilometers from Galapagos diversified into species with the typical variations in beak sizes, etc. "If this diversification occurred in less than seventeen years," Dr. Spetner asks, "why did Darwin's Galapagos finches [as claimed by evolutionists] have to take two million years?" * Opals Can Form in "A Few Months" And Don't Need 100,000 Years: A leading authority on opals, Allan W. Eckert, observed that, "scientific papers and textbooks have told that the process of opal formation requires tens of thousands of years, perhaps hundreds of thousands... Not true." A 2011 peer-reviewed paper in a geology journal from Australia, where almost all the world's opal is found, reported on the: "new timetable for opal formation involving weeks to a few months and not the hundreds of thousands of years envisaged by the conventional weathering model." (And apparently, per a 2019 report from Entomology Today, opals can even form around insects!) More knowledgeable scientists resist the uncritical, group-think insistence on false super-slow formation rates (as also for manganese nodules, gold veins, stone, petroleum, canyons and gullies, and even guts, all below). Regarding opals, Darwinian bias led geologists to long ignore possible quick action, as from microbes, as a possible explanation for these mineraloids. For both in nature and in the lab, opals form rapidly, not even in 10,000 years, but in weeks. See this also from creationists by a geologist, a paleobiochemist, and a nuclear chemist. * Blue Eyes Originated Not So Long Ago: Not a million years ago, nor a hundred thousand years ago, but based on a peer-reviewed paper in Human Genetics, a press release at Science Daily reports that, "research shows that people with blue eyes have a single, common ancestor. A team at the University of Copenhagen have tracked down a genetic mutation which took place 6-10,000 years ago and is the cause of the eye color of all blue-eyed humans alive on the planet today." * Adding the Entire Universe to our List of Not So Old Things? Based on March 2019 findings from Hubble, Nobel laureate Adam Riess of the Space Telescope Science Institute and his co-authors in the Astrophysical Journal estimate that the universe is about a billion years younger than previously thought! Then in September 2019 in the journal Science, the age dropped precipitously to as low as 11.4 billion years! Of course, these measurements also further squeeze the canonical story of the big bang chronology with its many already existing problems including the insufficient time to "evolve" distant mature galaxies, galaxy clusters, superclusters, enormous black holes, filaments, bubbles, walls, and other superstructures. So, even though the latest estimates are still absurdly too old (Google: big bang predictions, and click on the #1 ranked article, or just go on over there to rsr.org/bb), regardless, we thought we'd plop the whole universe down on our List of Not So Old Things!   * After the Soft Tissue Discoveries, NOW Dino DNA: When a North Carolina State University paleontologist took the Tyrannosaurus Rex photos to the right of original biological material, that led to the 2016 discovery of dinosaur DNA, So far researchers have also recovered dinosaur blood vessels, collagen, osteocytes, hemoglobin, red blood cells, and various proteins. As of May 2018, twenty-six scientific journals, including Nature, Science, PNAS, PLoS One, Bone, and Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, have confirmed the discovery of biomaterial fossils from many dinosaurs! Organisms including T. Rex, hadrosaur, titanosaur, triceratops, Lufengosaur, mosasaur, and Archaeopteryx, and many others dated, allegedly, even hundreds of millions of years old, have yielded their endogenous, still-soft biological material. See the web's most complete listing of 100+ journal papers (screenshot, left) announcing these discoveries at bflist.rsr.org and see it in layman's terms at rsr.org/soft. * Rapid Stalactites, Stalagmites, Etc.: A construction worker in 1954 left a lemonade bottle in one of Australia's famous Jenolan Caves. By 2011 it had been naturally transformed into a stalagmite (below, right). Increasing scientific knowledge is arguing for rapid cave formation (see below, Nat'l Park Service shrinks Carlsbad Caverns formation estimates from 260M years, to 10M, to 2M, to it "depends"). Likewise, examples are growing of rapid formations with typical chemical make-up (see bottle, left) of classic stalactites and stalagmites including: - in Nat'l Geo the Carlsbad Caverns stalagmite that rapidly covered a bat - the tunnel stalagmites at Tennessee's Raccoon Mountain - hundreds of stalactites beneath the Lincoln Memorial - those near Gladfelter Hall at Philadelphia's Temple University (send photos to Bob@rsr.org) - hundreds of stalactites at Australia's zinc mine at Mt. Isa.   - and those beneath Melbourne's Shrine of Remembrance. * Most Human Mutations Arose in 200 Generations: From Adam until Real Science Radio, in only 200 generations! The journal Nature reports The Recent Origin of Most Human Protein-coding Variants. As summarized by geneticist co-author Joshua Akey, "Most of the mutations that we found arose in the last 200 generations or so" (the same number previously published by biblical creationists). Another 2012 paper, in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology (Eugenie Scott's own field) on High mitochondrial mutation rates, shows that one mitochondrial DNA mutation occurs every other generation, which, as creationists point out, indicates that mtEve would have lived about 200 generations ago. That's not so old! * National Geographic's Not-So-Old Hard-Rock Canyon at Mount St. Helens: As our List of Not So Old Things (this web page) reveals, by a kneejerk reaction evolutionary scientists assign ages of tens or hundreds of thousands of years (or at least just long enough to contradict Moses' chronology in Genesis.) However, with closer study, routinely, more and more old ages get revised downward to fit the world's growing scientific knowledge. So the trend is not that more information lengthens ages, but rather, as data replaces guesswork, ages tend to shrink until they are consistent with the young-earth biblical timeframe. Consistent with this observation, the May 2000 issue of National Geographic quotes the U.S. Forest Service's scientist at Mount St. Helens, Peter Frenzen, describing the canyon on the north side of the volcano. "You'd expect a hard-rock canyon to be thousands, even hundreds of thousands of years old. But this was cut in less than a decade." And as for the volcano itself, while again, the kneejerk reaction of old-earthers would be to claim that most geologic features are hundreds of thousands or millions of years old, the atheistic National Geographic magazine acknowledges from the evidence that Mount St. Helens, the volcanic mount, is only about 4,000 years old! See below and more at rsr.org/mount-st-helens. * Mount St. Helens Dome Ten Years Old not 1.7 Million: Geochron Laboratories of Cambridge, Mass., using potassium-argon and other radiometric techniques claims the rock sample they dated, from the volcano's dome, solidified somewhere between 340,000 and 2.8 million years ago. However photographic evidence and historical reports document the dome's formation during the 1980s, just ten years prior to the samples being collected. With the age of this rock known, radiometric dating therefore gets the age 99.99999% wrong. * Devils Hole Pupfish Isolated Not for 13,000 Years But for 100: Secular scientists default to knee-jerk, older-than-Bible-age dates. However, a tiny Mojave desert fish is having none of it. Rather than having been genetically isolated from other fish for 13,000 years (which would make this small school of fish older than the Earth itself), according to a paper in the journal Nature, actual measurements of mutation rates indicate that the genetic diversity of these Pupfish could have been generated in about 100 years, give or take a few. * Polystrates like Spines and Rare Schools of Fossilized Jellyfish: Previously, seven sedimentary layers in Wisconsin had been described as taking a million years to form. And because jellyfish have no skeleton, as Charles Darwin pointed out, it is rare to find them among fossils. But now, reported in the journal Geology, a school of jellyfish fossils have been found throughout those same seven layers. So, polystrate fossils that condense the time of strata deposition from eons to hours or months, include: - Jellyfish in central Wisconsin were not deposited and fossilized over a million years but during a single event quick enough to trap a whole school. (This fossil school, therefore, taken as a unit forms a polystrate fossil.) Examples are everywhere that falsify the claims of strata deposition over millions of years. - Countless trilobites buried in astounding three dimensionality around the world are meticulously recovered from limestone, much of which is claimed to have been deposited very slowly. Contrariwise, because these specimens were buried rapidly in quickly laid down sediments, they show no evidence of greater erosion on their upper parts as compared to their lower parts. - The delicacy of radiating spine polystrates, like tadpole and jellyfish fossils, especially clearly demonstrate the rapidity of such strata deposition. - A second school of jellyfish, even though they rarely fossilized, exists in another locale with jellyfish fossils in multiple layers, in Australia's Brockman Iron Formation, constraining there too the rate of strata deposition. By the way, jellyfish are an example of evolution's big squeeze. Like galaxies e

america god university california world australia google earth science bible washington france space real young nature africa european creator writing philadelphia australian evolution japanese dna minnesota tennessee modern hawaii wisconsin bbc 3d island journal nbc birds melbourne mt chile flash mass scientists cambridge increasing pacific bang bone wyoming consistent generations iceland ohio state instant wired decades rapid nobel national geographic scientific talks remembrance genetics maui yellowstone national park copenhagen grand canyon chemical big bang nova scotia nbc news smithsonian astronomy secular daily mail telegraph arial temple university canyon groundbreaking screenshots 2m helvetica papua new guinea charles darwin 10m variants death valley geology jellyfish american journal geo nps cosmology national park service hubble north carolina state university steve austin public libraries cambridge university press missoula galapagos geographic organisms mojave diabolical forest service aig darwinian veins mount st tyrannosaurus rex new scientist lincoln memorial helens plos one galapagos islands shri inky cambrian cmi human genetics pnas live science science daily canadian arctic asiatic opals spines canadian broadcasting corporation finches rsr park service two generations 3den unintelligible spirit lake junk dna space telescope science institute carlsbad caverns fred williams archaeopteryx ctrl f 260m nature geoscience from creation vertebrate paleontology from darwin 2fjournal physical anthropology eugenie scott british geological survey 3dtrue larval 252c adam riess ctowud bob enyart raleway oligocene 3dfalse jenolan caves ctowud a6t real science radio allan w eckert kgov
Content Inc with Joe Pulizzi
Mel Robbins & Her Three-Part Content Strategy (488)

Content Inc with Joe Pulizzi

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 3:42


The original "three legs of the stool" for publishing was online, in print and in-person. For today's content creator it's still three legs, but they've changed. Here's a great example of Mel Robbins and her "three legs" content creation strategy: a book, speaking and a show. ------- Like this episode? SUBSCRIBE on Apple, Spotify or Google. See all Content Inc episodes at the Content Inc. podcast home. Get my personal newsletter today and receive my free goal-setting guide today.

It's No Fluke
E145 Joe Pulizzi: Create a Show

It's No Fluke

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2025 44:46


Joe Pulizzi is an absolute delight (what a treat , what a dream) and the founder of multiple startups including content creator education site, The Tilt,  Content Entrepreneur Expo (CEX), and is the bestselling author of seven books including Content Inc. and Epic Content Marketing, which was named a “Must-Read Business Book” by Fortune Magazine.Joe is best known for his work in content marketing, first using the term in 2001, then launching Content Marketing Institute and the Content Marketing World event. In 2014, he received the "Lifetime Achievement Award" by the Content Council. He successfully exited CMI in 2016 and consequently wrote an award-winning mystery novel, The Will to Die.He has two weekly podcasts, the motivational Content Inc. podcast and the award-winning content news and analysis show This Old Marketing with Robert Rose.His foundation, The Orange Effect, delivers speech therapy and technology services to over 400 children in 39 states.Joe and his family live in Cleveland, Ohio. 

Introverts Inspire
154. How building allies builds your inclusive culture with Natalie Quilter

Introverts Inspire

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 44:57


How building allies builds your inclusive culture   On today's episode we are chatting with the amazing Natalie Quilter. A diversity and inclusion specialist  Natalie is an accomplished operations and inclusion leader within the housing sector, currently leading the G15s inclusion strategy. Motivated by her own mental health challenges and being a caregiver for her mother,  Natalie uses her lived experience and specialist knowledge to support employees both within the sector and beyond. She partners with organisations ranging from small to global enterprises – delivering impactful talks and workshops on topics in the ED&I and wellbeing realm - specialising in supporting carers in the workplace. Natalie has also authored impactful case studies for the National Housing Federation, CMI and Carers UK, and earned recognition from Investors in People, Working Families, Reward Gateway and recently was named Unpaid Carers Ambassador of the year 2024. Listen in to hear more about Natalie's own experiences of how allies have shaped her career progression and the powerful and often life changing impact that they can have on individuals.   Connect with Natalie      --------- Book a chat with Gemma - This is the place to book a call to see how Gemma can help you or your company support female leaders to raise their profile, increase performance and visibility and build more allies.   Get the White Paper > ‘Visibility at Work: The Importance of Self Promotion for Women's Career Progression   I want to hear from YOU so get in touch with me:   Connect with your host Gemma Stow: Website: https://www.gemmastow.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gemmastow/ LinkedIn: Business Page https://www.linkedin.com/company/no-more-hiding/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nomorehidingco Blue Sky: https://bsky.app/profile/gemmastow.bsky.social

Ykkösaamu
Ukrainan ja USA:n edustajat tapaavat Saudi-Arabiassa

Ykkösaamu

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2025 49:50


Yhdysvaltojen ja Ukrainan edustajat tapaavat Saudi-Arabiassa. Mitä rauhantunnusteluilta voi odottaa? Vieraina Helsingin yliopiston ja Maanpuolustuskorkeakoulun apulaisprofessori Katri Pynnöniemi ja konfliktinratkaisujärjestö CMI:n ohjelmajohtaja Oskari Eronen. Voisiko Yhdysvallat vetää joukkojaan Euroopasta? Eurooppa-kirjeenvaihtaja Anna Karismo raportoi Yhdysvaltojen lentotukikohdasta Saksan Ramsteinista. Pohjanmerellä Englannin rannikolla sattui maanantaina uhkaava laivaturma, kun rahtialus törmäsi öljytankkeriin. Lontoossa oleva kirjeenvaihtaja Kirsi Crowley kertoo tuoreet tiedot onnettomuudesta. Ranskan presidentti on kutsunut Euroopan asevoimien komentajia koolle. Pariisissa kokousta seuraa Ranskan-toimittaja Miina Väisänen. Euroopassa pohditaan rauhanturvaajien lähettämistä Ukrainaan. Miten maailmanpoliittinen tilanne on vaikuttanut varusmiesten koulutukseen Suomessa? Vieraina Reserviläisliiton toiminnanjohtaja Minna Nenonen ja Rauhanturvaajaliiton puheenjohtaja Jorma Ala-Sankila. Tanskalle kuuluvassa itsehallintoalue Grönlannissa järjestetään parlamenttivaalit. Tanskan-toimittaja Karoliina Kantola kertoo, missä tunnelmissa grönlantilaiset lähtevät vaaliuurnille. Juontajana Atte Uusinoka, toimittajana Seppo Kivimäki, tuottajana Annette Blencowe. Korjaus: Eurooppa-kirjeenvaihtaja Anna Karismon raportissa sanotaan virheellisesti brittilehti The Telegraphin kertoneen, että Yhdysvaltojen joukkoja oltaisiin siirtämässä Ukrainaan. Todellisuudessa lehti kertoi, että joukkoja oltaisiin siirtämässä Unkariin.

Metadoxos
EP71 - Programa CMI: Corporificando seu melhor potencial para o mundo – um antídoto para a banalidade e fragmentação dos nossos tempos

Metadoxos

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2025 25:07


Este ano, a Chie completa 10 anos, e ao longo dessa trajetória realizamos muitos projetos incríveis e um deles é a CMI – Certificação Meta Integral. A CMI nasceu de um sonho e, acredito, é um verdadeiro antídoto frente à fragmentação e aos desafios dos nossos tempos, sendo um espaço acolhedor e de conexões genuínas, onde buscamos criar novas realidades, tanto internas quanto externas.Mais do que um programa, a CMI é uma comunidade – você aprende a integrar traumas, expandir a consciência e despertar para novas possibilidades, entendendo que o aprendizado é um processo contínuo, inclusive para desaprender quantas vezes for preciso. Nesse episódio você vai entender como o nosso programa funciona, e como a CMI oferece contexto, suporte e as ferramentas para encontrar novos caminhos de forma saudável e transformadora.Vem ouvir o novo episódio do Metadoxos e conhecer melhor nossa jornada. Quem sabe você se junta a nós na 9ª turma da CMI?Site CMI: https://www.chieintegrates.com/certificacao-meta-integral/Host:Marcelo CardosoProdução:Gabriela Szulcsewski@travs.estudio

Manningham Christian Centre
Rod Walsh - "Deluge of Evidence" The truth about Noah's Ark

Manningham Christian Centre

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 65:04


Have you ever wondered if there is any evidence of a catastrophic world wide flood?  The evidence is made clear with Rod Walsh from CMI. Not only will you hear about what has been found but also what has been covered up! Join us for a morning with Rod Walsh from Creation Ministries!

Manningham Christian Centre
Rod Walsh - "Deluge of Evidence" The truth about Noah's Ark

Manningham Christian Centre

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 65:04


Have you ever wondered if there is any evidence of a catastrophic world wide flood?  The evidence is made clear with Rod Walsh from CMI. Not only will you hear about what has been found but also what has been covered up! Join us for a morning with Rod Walsh from Creation Ministries!

Cancer Buzz
ACCC Capitol Hill Day

Cancer Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2025 5:20


Members of the Association of Cancer Care Centers (ACCC) are preparing for a day of cancer care advocacy on Capitol Hill during its 51st Annual Meeting and Cancer Center Business Summit (AMCCBS) in Washington, DC between March 5-7, 2025. In this episode, CANCER BUZZ speaks with Nicole Tapay, JD, director of Cancer Care Delivery & Health Policy at ACCC about key policy issues that members will address during ACCC's Capitol Hill Day, including drug shortages, Medicare reimbursement for patient navigation, and concerns over the Inflation Reduction Act's impact on provider reimbursement for infused medications. “[Capitol] Hill Day is a chance for cancer care providers to directly engage in the policymaking process—it's not part of their normal day jobs, but they find it incredibly rewarding." –  Nicole Tapay, JD   "When cancer care providers visit the Hill in person, it's a very valuable part of the process; they share firsthand experiences that truly illustrate the impact of policy decisions." –  Nicole Tapay, JD   Nicole Tapay, JD Director, Cancer Care Delivery & Health Policy Association of Cancer Care Centers   Additional Resources ACCC Capitol Hill Day (https://www.accc-cancer.org/home/attend/capitol-hill-day) 2024 Policy Wrap-Up – Oncology Issues, Vol.40, No 1, 2025 (https://journals.accc-cancer.org/view/2024-policy-wrap-up?_gl=1*ael8au*_gcl_aw*R0NMLjE3Mzg2OTM3MDUuQ2owS0NRaUFrb2U5QmhEWUFSSXNBSDg1Y0RPekNiaW1WYkJ0TGw1dEtwV0s3ZzFtbWZ3b0tFMkxENTUwMVRkZGZUQzByOUFCS1FUeVpVSWFBa3dvRUFMd193Y0I.*_ga*MTIxNzU0NTA2MC4xNjkxNzY0Mjg0*_ga_HW05FVSTWC*MTc0MDA2NjkzMS41Ni4xLjE3NDAwNjc2NzEuNTIuMC4w) Register for the 51st Annual Meeting and Cancer Care Business Summit (https://events.accc-cancer.org/event/90b42ca3-a5fd-4f87-a1eb-fe4e00d2e9de/overview?RefId=LIP&utm_campaign=2025AM&utm_campaign=CMI%20%7C%20CMA-22-ACCC010%20%7C%20AMCCBS%2025%20%7C%20EV&utm_medium=paid&utm_medium=ppc&utm_source=google&utm_source=adwords&utm_term=accc%20annual%20meeting&hsa_acc=3682411462&hsa_cam=22029487582&hsa_grp=175156250827&hsa_ad=725387102374&hsa_src=g&hsa_tgt=kwd-2265122107589&hsa_kw=accc%20annual%20meeting&hsa_mt=p&hsa_net=adwords&hsa_ver=3&gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAiAn9a9BhBtEiwAbKg6fhOf1fzDdOci-BU8AdIjtS9Y9domwiVkSlasNVK7jVaYE2yv799cHRoC_k4QAvD_BwE) View Agenda for the 51st Annual Meeting and Cancer Care Business Summit (https://agenda.mjhlifesciences.com/agenda/accc/e02ac0e0-7646-4ff5-b872-e3e2ee8b7e22?_gl=1*1k3a1eu*_gcl_aw*R0NMLjE3NDAwMDE0ODcuQ2p3S0NBaUFuOWE5QmhCdEVpd0FiS2c2ZmhPZjFmekRkT2NpLUJVOEFkSWp0UzlZOWRvbXdpVmtTbGFzTlZLN2pWYVlFMnl2Nzk5Y0hSb0NfazRRQXZEX0J3RQ..*_ga*MTU3NjkxMTU5Mi4xNzM2MTc4MTQy*_ga_HW05FVSTWC*MTc0MDAwMDc4NS43Mi4xLjE3NDAwMDE0ODguNDQuMC4w)

Politiikkaradio
Pitääkö Ukrainan tehdä mineraalidiili Trumpin kanssa? – Professori näkee ”uuskolonialismin” merkkejä

Politiikkaradio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2025 29:18


Viikonloppuna käytiin Saksan Münchenissä turvallisuuskonferenssi, jonka jälkeen Pariisissa käydään tänään maanantaina hätäkokousta. Luottamus transatlanttisiin suhteisiin horjuu. Keskustelemassa maailmanpolitiikan professori Teivo Teivainen, CMI:n vanhempi asiantuntija Mikko Patokallio ja ulkopoliittisen instituutin vanhempi tutkija Matti Pesu. Mitkä maat istuvat pöytään kun Ukrainan rauhasta neuvotellaan? Pitääkö Ukrainan antaa Donald Trumpille sopimus mineraaleista, jotta Yhdysvaltain tuki varmistetaan? Zelenskyi kieltäytyi allekirjoittamasta USA:n tarjoamaa sopimusta viikonloppuna, mutta neuvottelut jatkuvat. Toimittajana on Linda Pelkonen.

Ykkösaamu
Mitä viikonlopun turvallisuuskokouksesta jäi käteen?

Ykkösaamu

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2025 49:52


Münchenin turvallisuuskonferenssi on koonnut viikonloppuna läntisen maailman johtajat yhteen. Mitä kokouksesta jäi käteen? Vieraina kansainvälisen politiikan professori Tuomas Forsberg Tampereen yliopistosta ja Münchenissa ollut UPIn tutkija Joel Linnainmäki. Palvelualojen ammattiliitto PAMin julistaman kaupan alan lakon on määrä alkaa. Miten maanantaina alkavat lakot näkyvät kuluttajille? Puhelimessa Kaupan liiton toimitusjohtaja Kari Luoto. Israel on uhannut lopettaa äärijärjestö Hamasin kanssa sovitun aselevon, ellei Hamas luovuta lauantaina kolmea elossa olevaa panttivankia Israelille. Miten tulenarka tilanne Lähi-idässä kehittyy? Studiossa väitöskirjatutkija Bruno Jäntti Helsingin yliopistosta ja vanhempi projektipäällikkö Saana Keskitalo konfliktinratkaisujärjestö CMI:stä. Juontaja Atte Uusinoka, toimittaja Satu Heikkilä, tuottaja Annette Blencowe. Korjaus: Lähi-itää koskevan keskustelun yhteydessä sanottiin, että Israel ja Hamas vaihtoivat panttivankeja viikonloppuna. Oikea muotoilu olisi, että Israel ja Hamas vaihtoivat vankeja.

AZIMUT
CMI : Cursus Master en Ingénierie, une alternative aux écoles d'ingénieurs ➿

AZIMUT

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2025 5:48


Le CMI, qui combine licence et master en parallèle, offre une approche innovante en ingénierie avec des spécialités variées et un encadrement renforcé. Avec des frais d'inscription réduits et des opportunités de stages, il se distingue comme une option prometteuse pour les jeunes souhaitant se spécialiser rapidement.✅ DANS CET ÉPISODE NOUS ABORDONS :Le fonctionnement et la structure du CMI.Les particularités et avantages par rapport aux écoles d'ingénieurs.Les perspectives professionnelles après un CMI.

Association Hub Podcast
#61: The Art of Change: Steffi Jackson on Leading a Global Community

Association Hub Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2025 23:39


In this episode of the Association Hub Podcast, we sit down with Steffi Jackson, CEO of the Change Management Institute, to celebrate their remarkable achievement: winning two Associations Forum Awards in back-to-back years. Steffi shares the story behind this success, starting with Change Management Institute being named Small Association of the Year in 2023, followed by their 2024 win for External Campaign of the Year. From the campaign's humble beginnings to its resounding success, Steffi reflects on how the Institute's small but passionate team and global network of volunteers came together to create something truly impactful.   We also explore: CMI's mission to connect and support change management professionals worldwide. The power of community and collaboration in achieving big goals. Practical advice on crafting award submissions that truly tell your story.  This conversation isn't just about awards; it's about the dedication, vision, and teamwork that made it all possible. Tune in to celebrate with us, and don't forget to subscribe, share, and leave a review!

J+7
J+7 - 20/01/2025 - CMI sur son 18

J+7

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2025 148:34


Le renouvellement des fréquences : check. La numérotation des chaînes : check. Que reste-t-il ? Ah ben, à quoi vont ressembler les nouvelles chaînes ? Et bien l'équipe de J+7 revient dans cet épisode truculent sur les premières annonces concernant T18, la nouvelle chaîne de CMI : tchèque. On y revient en détail dans l'Actu, avec les dernières nouvelles de l'Arcom, le Bayrou-lement de tambour de la holding, l'Alliance des radios privées, H2O qui coule, le casting de DALS (et celui de Mask Singer), The Cerveau-lent, le banc des remplaçants de l'Equipe, et Tik Tok qui fait devenir toc toc (j'ai 80 ans). Et dans le Vu & Entendu … Voilà. Et puis pêle-mêle : l'appli Radeau France, le projet de programme de maths du cycle 3, Marie-Laure Hongrie, T18 c'est réel, “Bastien dit les termes chacal” votre nouvelle chronique, Meuhnumental, HUMOUR de Paul de Saint-Sernin, Guillaume J'entends, David Larramène-moins, le Ficello de bite, Joe Bytedance, Mister bise et 45-46-47-45 ! Au sommaire : 0:00 - Introduction 6:19 - Vu & Entendu 6:40 - L'Actu 2:24:33 - Conclu Les recos : Le blousque de Bastien - Le 10km médias Last Week Tonight - TikTok Ban Articles évoqués dans l'épisode : Le Figaro - «T18 ne fera pas de la télévision de seconde zone» : la future chaîne TNT de Daniel Kretinsky dévoile ses ambitions Bluesky - Flowering11 - Logo T18 X - BenjiMédias - Convention CMITV Le Figaro - Réforme de l'audiovisuel public: la fin de la malédiction ? Le Monde - Sibyle Veil : « Radio France déjoue tous les pronostics » La Tribune - Audiences, budget, nouvelle numérotation : les vérités de Delphine Ernotte, PDG de France Télévisions Puremédias - Stéphane Sitbon-Gomez : “Les Jeux olympiques de Paris 2024 ont récompensé la dynamique de long terme de France 2” Puremédias - Stéphane Sitbon-Gomez annonce travailler à “une grille de France 4 plus lisible avec des rendez-vous plus affirmés” pour l'arrivée de la chaîne sur le canal 4 de la TNT Radio France - Pastilles sonores 50 ans Le Figaro - Les radios privées font front commun face à la concurrence des géants du numérique L'Informé - La société de production de Cyril Hanouna tombe dans le rouge Puremédias - “Danse avec les stars” : Nouveautés, candidats, jury, date de diffusion, durée de la compétition… Tout ce qu'il faut savoir sur la saison 14 du show de TF1 Le Parisien - « The Cerveau » : l'influenceuse Melanight accuse M 6 d'avoir volé son idée d'émission de téléréalité Libération - Le directeur de la rédaction de «l'Equipe» écarté, celui de «Gala» pressenti à sa place Le Parisien - Révolution en vue ? Les audiences des plateformes de streaming pourraient être publiées dès cette année Le Monde - La folle journée de TikTok aux Etats-Unis, bloqué puis rétabli Rejoignez le Discord d'Alex Arbey, suivez @jplussept sur X/Twitter et sur Instagram ou @jplus7.fr sur Bluesky Laissez-nous vos avis sur ce que vous avez vous aussi vu & entendu tout au long de la semaine sur repondeur.jplus7.fr Une émission animée par Alex Arbey, en direct sur Twitch tous les lundi à 20h35 : twitch.tv/alexarbey

Ask Me How I Know: Multifamily Investor Stories of Struggle to Success
Heal Faster, Live Freer: Transformative Therapy Uncovered | Episode 553

Ask Me How I Know: Multifamily Investor Stories of Struggle to Success

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2024 60:39


Welcome back, Conscious Investor!Have you ever felt like traditional therapy wasn't getting you the results you wanted? In this transformative episode, I sit down with the incredible Laurel Wiers, a trauma and therapy expert, to dive into groundbreaking therapeutic methods that rewire your brain and reset your nervous system—sometimes in just ONE session. Whether you've struggled with deep-seated trauma, daily stress, or unexplained emotional blocks, Laurel's insights will blow your mind.Together, we uncover the science behind accelerated healing, the limitations of talk therapy, and why understanding the root of our emotions is just the beginning. Laurel shares her approach using methods like accelerated resolution therapy (ART), EMDR, and critical memory integration (CMI) to help high performers and everyday individuals alike break free from the emotional baggage holding them back. By the end of this episode, you'll have actionable steps to identify and start addressing your own blocks—and maybe even rethink your approach to emotional wellness.Connect with Laurel:https://www.linkedin.com/in/laurelwiers/https://www.instagram.com/laurelwierswww.laurelwiers.comConscious Investor Growth Summit details: https://www.consciousinvestorgrowthsummit.com/Schedule a 20-min get-to-know each other call:bit.ly/3OK31kISchedule a 30-min call to learn about investing with Three Keys Investments:bit.ly/3yteWhxVisit ThreeKeysInvestments.com to download a free e-book, “Why Invest in Apartments”.If you're looking for an affordable healthcare solution, check out Christian Healthcare Ministries.Each week I send out a newsletter that's designed to take thinking deeper. Join the thousands of other newsletter subscribers here: https://link.iamaconsciousinvestor.com/widget/form/DPbUpgmqXlu3jrMUELN9

The Resilient Recruiter
How Smart Market Timing Built My 25-Year Recruitment Practice, with Brock Boyd, Ep #238

The Resilient Recruiter

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 64:15


"Work hardest when times are best, not worst" - this counterintuitive philosophy helped Brock Boyd build a 25-year tech recruitment empire that's survived three major market crashes. When Brock Boyd started his recruitment firm in 1998, he ran his business from his bedroom in a shared house, where suited colleagues would show up to work daily - sometimes while he was still sleeping from late-night prospecting.  Today, 25 years later, he's a member of the prestigious Pinnacle Society leading an international tech sales recruitment practice. Through multiple market cycles - from the dot-com crash to 2008's recession to today's tech slowdown - Brock has built Career Management Inc. (CMI) into a sustainable business while developing wealth-building principles that have given him true financial freedom. Episode Outline and Highlights: [01:49] How a friend needing a ride to a job fair led to recruitment. [04:27] Taking the entrepreneurial leap after just 11 months! [10:47] Recalling the early days: Cold calling from his bedroom while colleagues showed up in suits. [15:26] Discussion of peak performance periods: 1999-2000 and 2021-2022. [18:17] Focus on resilience: Surviving 2002 and the $63,000 bankruptcy challenge [24:22] "I work by far the hardest in the best of times" - Brock's contrarian business philosophy [27:47] Smart financial moves most recruiters miss: The "two boulders" theory [38:51] How to retire early as recruiters: The three key factors [54:56] Tech stack deep dive: What works in modern recruitment [1:03:19] Understanding market cycles: "It's like winter and spring will come" Building a Recession-Proof Tech Sales Recruitment Practice After being hired by a staffing firm, Brock launched his own business after only 11 months! He had a fascinating story of finding his way into permanent staffing without really having much of a background before starting his recruitment firm. From solo operator to leading an international team, Brock has built Career Management Inc. (CMI) into a sustainable practice over 25 years. Starting with just three clients in 1998, he strategically evolved from general sales to specialized tech sales recruitment. Here is his firm's current structure: 3.5 full-desk recruiters (US-based) 2.5 candidate-focused recruiters International support team across Argentina, Colombia, Philippines, and India Support staff handling administrative and database work Below are the key success factors that helped his business thrive over the years, through multiple market cycles, including the dot-com crash, the 2008 recession, and the current tech slowdown, while growing sustainably through each recovery. Early specialization in tech sales (higher fees vs general sales) Lean operations during growth years Strategic investment in revenue-generating tools Counter-cyclical work approach: highest effort during boom markets Maintaining core tools during downturns while cutting non-essential costs Personal Finance & Wealth Building for Recruiters A topic that resonates well with me is how Brock gives value to personal finance and wealth building for people in the recruitment industry. Most successful recruiters earn exceptional income, yet struggle to build lasting wealth in the long term. Brock has been a great example of turning his recruitment earnings into true financial freedom through disciplined investing and smart money management. He shared his mindset and strategies on how he balances his investment strategy with different instruments and risks.  Below are some core best practices he shared on the topic of personal finance: Keep lifestyle expenses well below earnings, especially in good years Never invest more than 10% of total assets in any single investment Maintain substantial cash reserves to buy assets during downturns Focus on three key areas: work earnings, investment earnings, and lifestyle costs "The further below your earnings your lifestyle and spending are, the faster you're going to get to financial freedom. And the closer they are, or God forbid they're overlapped in the wrong direction, then the further away that is." This disciplined approach has helped Brock build sustainable wealth through multiple market cycles while many recruiters, despite high earnings, struggle with long-term financial security. “Working Hardest in the Best of Times” "Work hardest when times are best, not worst" - this counterintuitive philosophy helped Brock Boyd build a 25-year tech recruitment empire that's survived three major market crashes.  Brock's work ethic revolves around maintaining resilience through challenging times while recognizing the role of external factors. Uniquely, Brock works hardest during prosperous times, moderately during stable periods, and least during downturns. He views this approach as a strategic response to the opportunity cost, focusing energy where returns are likely highest. This pragmatic mindset helps him stay balanced and focused despite industry fluctuations. Disclaimer: This podcast does not provide financial or tax advice; listeners are encouraged to consult a qualified professional for personalized guidance.   Brock Boyd Bio and Contact Info  Brock has served as President/Chief Executive Officer since founding Career Management, Inc. in April 1998. His aggressive pursuit of face time with the staffing industry's leading experts led him to become the youngest member on the Board of the National Association of Personnel Services in 2001. To date, Brock has completed over 500 successful searches. In May of 2000, he was featured in the NAPS newsletter for his accomplishments and vision.    In addition, he received his CPC (Certified Personnel Consultant) designation in 2003. He has also produced and delivered seminars on interviewing skills (for candidates seeking positions as well as hiring managers). He has been hired to deliver sales training to multiple companies as well as consulting several companies on the process of building/hiring a sales organization from scratch.   Brock graduated from Old Dominion University where he was a NCAA Division I Collegiate Wrestler. He lives in Vienna, VA with his wife and son. Brock Boyd on LinkedIn  CMI (Career Management Inc) website  People and Resources Mentioned Bullhorn (ATS) LinkedIn Recruiter LinkedIn Sales Navigator Prospect Ladder  Lusha  ZoomInfo  Pinnacle Society  S&P 500 Index   Connect with Mark Whitby Get your FREE 30-minute strategy call Mark on LinkedIn Mark on Twitter: @MarkWhitby Mark on Facebook Mark on Instagram: @RecruitmentCoach   Subscribe to The Resilient Recruiter If you've been enjoying the podcast, please take two minutes to leave a review. Your review is greatly appreciated because it helps us attract a bigger audience and help more recruiters.

Keeping It Real-Estate Show
EP160 Mastering Property Tax Litigation with Mark Cantrell

Keeping It Real-Estate Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2024 30:55


Mark J. Cantrell, founding partner and shareholder of Cantrell McCulloch, Inc. (CMI), began his real estate career in 1984 with Marcus & Millichap, quickly becoming one of the company's top earners. From 1990 to 1996, he was the leading producer in the company's Texas offices. In 1997, Mark and his brother Tim founded The Cantrell Company (TCC), focusing on multifamily brokerage. Later, in 2001, Mark, Tim, and Bobby McCulloch co-founded CMI, which has since grown into one of Texas' largest property tax consulting firms. Mark leads the day-to-day operations and is in charge of business development, working alongside partner Bobby McCulloch. Under Mark's leadership, CMI now represents over $50 billion in property value across 29 states, including nearly 2,000 multifamily properties valued at over $40 billion. The firm's tax savings for tax year 2023 are expected to exceed $150 million. Mark is often consulted for his expertise in property values and strategies for dealing with appraisal district protests. In addition to his role at CMI, Mark is a partner in several DFW apartment and commercial properties and a founder of Texas Republic Bank. Tune in for insights into property tax consulting, real estate valuation strategies, and the importance of effective business development. To get in touch with Mark, reach out to him on this email address: mcantrell@cmi-tax.com Keeping it Real Estate is brought to you by Granite Towers Equity Group, helping investors create passive income through multifamily real estate. To get in touch with the founders of Granite Towers, Mike Roeder and Dan Brisse, visit https://www.granitetowersequitygroup.com/contact

Bob Enyart Live
Evolution's Big Squeeze

Bob Enyart Live

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2024


* List of Discoveries Squeezing Evolution: Did you know that dinosaurs ate rice before rice evolved? That turtle shells existed forty million years before turtle shells began evolving? That insects evolved tongues for eating from flowers 70 million years before flowers evolved? And that birds appeared before birds evolved? The fossil record is a wonderful thing. And more recently, only a 40,000-year squeeze, Neanderthal had blood types A, B, and O, shocking evolutionists but expected to us here at Real Science Radio! Sit back and get ready to enjoy another instant classic, today's RSR "list show" on Evolution's Big Squeeze! Our other popular list shows include: - scientists doubting Darwin - evidence against whale evolution - problems with 'the river carved the canyon' - carbon 14 everywhere it shouldn't be - dinosaur still-soft biological tissue - solar system formation problems - evidence against the big bang - evidence for the global flood - genomes that just don't fit - and our list of not so old things! (See also rsr.org/sq2 and rsr.org/sq3!) * Evolution's Big Squeeze: Many discoveries squeeze the Darwinian theory's timeframe and of course without a workable timeframe there is no workable theory. Examples, with their alleged (and falsified) old-earth timeframes, include: - Complex skeletons existed 9 million years before they were thought to have evolved, before even the "Cambrian explosion".- Butterflies existed 10 million years before they were thought to have evolved. - Parrots existed "much earlier than had been thought", in fact, 25 million years before they were thought to have evolved. - Cephalopod fossils (squids, cuttlefish, etc.) appear 35 million years before they were able to propagate. - Turtle shells 40 million years before turtle shells began evolving - Trees began evolving 45 million years before they were thought to evolve - Spores appearing 50 million years before the plants that made them (not unlike footprints systematically appearing "millions of years before" the creatures that made them, as affirmed by Dr. Marcus Ross, associate professor of geology). - Sponges existed 60 million years before they were believed to have evolved. - Dinosaurs ate rice before it evolved Example - Insect proboscis (tongue) in moths and butterflies 70 million years before previously believed has them evolving before flowers. - Arthropod brains fully developed with central nervous system running to eyes and appendages just like modern arthropods 90 million years earlier than previously known (prior to 2021, now, allegedly 310mya) - 100 million years ago and already a bird - Fossil pollen pushes back plant evolution 100 million years. - Mammalian hair allegedly 100-million-years-old show that, "the morphology of hair cuticula may have remained unchanged throughout most of mammalian evolution", regarding the overlapping cells that lock the hair shaft into its follicle. - Piranha-like flesh-eating teeth (and bitten prey) found pushing back such fish 125 million years earlier than previously claimed   - Shocking organic molecules in "200 million-years-old leaves" from ginkgoes and conifers show unexpected stasis. - Plant genetic sophistication pushed back 200 million years. - Jellyfish fossils (Medusoid Problematica :) 200 million years earlier than expected; here from 500My ago. - Green seaweed 200 million years earlier than expected, pushed back now to a billion years ago!  - The acanthodii fish had color vision 300 million years ago, but then, and wait, Cheiracanthus fish allegedly 388 million years ago already had color vision. - Color vision (for which there is no Darwinian evolutionary small-step to be had, from monochromatic), existed "300 million years ago" in fish, and these allegedly "120-million-year-old" bird's rod and cone fossils stun researchers :) - 400-million-year-old Murrindalaspis placoderm fish "eye muscle attachment, the eyestalk attachment and openings for the optic nerve, and arteries and veins supplying the eyeball" The paper's author writes, "Of course, we would not expect the preservation of ancient structures made entirely of soft tissues (e.g. rods and cone cells in the retina...)." So, check this next item... :) - And... no vertebrates in the Cambrian? Well, from the journal Nature in 2014, a "Lower-Middle Cambrian... primitive fish displays unambiguous vertebrate features: a notochord, a pair of prominent camera-type eyes, paired nasal sacs, possible cranium and arcualia, W-shaped myomeres, and a post-anal tail" Primitive? - Fast-growing juvenile bone tissue, thought to appear in the Cretaceous, has been pushed back 100 million years: "This pushes the origin of fibrolamellar bone in Sauropterygia back from the Cretaceous to the early Middle Triassic..."- Trilobites "advanced" (not the predicted primitive) digestion "525 million" years ago - And there's this, a "530 million year old" fish, "50 million years before the current estimate of when fish evolved" - Mycobacterium tuberculosis 100,000 yr-old MRCA (most recent common ancestor) now 245 million- Fungus long claimed to originate 500M years ago, now found at allegedly 950 Mya (and still biological "the distant past... may have been much more 'modern' than we thought." :) - A rock contained pollen a billion years before plants evolved, according to a 2007 paper describing "remarkably preserved" fossil spores in the French Alps that had undergone high-grade metamorphism - 2.5 billion year old cyanobacteria fossils (made of organic material found in a stromatolite) appear about "200 million years before the [supposed] Great Oxidation Event". - 2.7 billion year old eukaryotes (cells with a nucleus) existed (allegedly) 1 billion years before expected - 3.5 billion year "cell division evidently identical to that of living filamentous prokaryotes." - And even older cyanobacteria! At 220 million years earlier than thought, per Nature's 3.7 billion year old dating of stromatolites! - The universe and life itself (in 2019 with the universe dated a billion, now, no, wait, two billion!, years younger than previously thought, that's not only squeezing biological but also astronomical evolution, with the overall story getting really tight) - Mantis shrimp, with its rudimentary color but advanced UV vision, is allegedly ancient. - Hadrosaur teeth, all 1400 of them, were "more complex than those of cows, horses, and other well-known modern grazers." Professor stunned by the find! (RSR predicts that, by 2030 just to put an end date on it, more fossils will be found from the geologic column that will be more "advanced" as compared to living organisms, just like this hadrosaur and like the allegedly 100M year old hagfish  fossil having more slime glands than living specimens.)  - Trace fossils "exquisitely preserved" of mobile organisms (motility) dated at 2.1 billion years ago, a full 1.5 billion earlier than previously believed - Various multicellular organisms allegedly 2.1 billion years old, show multicellularity 1.5 billion years sooner than long believed   - Pre-sauropod 26,000-pound dinosaur "shows us that even as far back as 200 million years ago, these animals had already become the largest vertebrates to ever walk the Earth." - The Evo-devo squeeze, i.e., evolutionary developmental biology, as with rsr.org/evo-devo-undermining-darwinism. - Extinct Siberian one-horned rhinos coexisted with mankind. - Whale "evolution" is being crushed in the industry-wide "big squeeze". First, geneticist claims whales evolved from hippos but paleontologists say hippos evolved tens of millions of years too late! And what's worse than that is that fossil finds continue to compress the time available for whale evolution. To not violate its own plot, the Darwinist story doesn't start animals evolving back into the sea until the cast includes land animals suitable to undertake the legendary journey. The recent excavation of whale fossils on an island of the Antarctic Peninsula further compresses the already absurdly fast 10 million years to allegedly evolve from the land back to the sea, down to as little as one million years. BioOne in 2016 reported a fossil that is "among the oldest occurrences of basilosaurids worldwide, indicating a rapid radiation and dispersal of this group since at least the early middle Eocene." By this assessment, various techniques produced various published dates. (See the evidence that falsifies the canonical whale evolution story at rsr.org/whales.) * Ancient Hierarchical Insect Society: "Thanks to some well-preserved remains, researchers now believe arthropod social structures have been around longer than anyone ever imagined. The encased specimens of ants and termites recently studied date back [allegedly] 100 million years." Also from the video about "the bubonic plague", the "disease is well known as a Middle Ages mass killer... Traces of very similar bacteria were found on [an allegedly] 20-million-year-old flea trapped in amber." And regarding "Caribbean lizards... Even though they are [allegedly] 20 million years old, the reptiles inside the golden stones were not found to differ from their contemporary counterparts in any significant way. Scientists attribute the rarity [Ha! A rarity or the rule? Check out rsr.org/stasis.] to stable ecological surroundings." * Squeezing and Rewriting Human History: Some squeezing simply makes aspects of the Darwinian story harder to maintain while other squeezing contradicts fundamental claims. So consider the following discoveries, most of which came from about a 12-month period beginning in 2017 which squeeze (and some even falsify) the Out-of-Africa model: - find two teeth and rewrite human history with allegedly 9.7 million-year-old teeth found in northern Europe (and they're like Lucy, but "three times older") - date blue eyes, when humans first sported them, to as recently as 6,000 years ago   - get mummy DNA and rewrite human history with a thousand years of ancient Egyptian mummy DNA contradicting Out-of-Africa and demonstrating Out-of-Babel - find a few footprints and rewrite human history with allegedly 5.7 million-year-old human footprints in Crete - re-date an old skull and rewrite human history with a very human skull dated at 325,000 years old and redated in the Journal of Physical Anthropology at about 260,000 years old and described in the UK's Independent, "A skull found in China [40 years ago] could re-write our entire understanding of human evolution." - date the oldest language in India, Dravidian, with 80 derivatives spoken by 214 million people, which appeared on the subcontinent only about 4,500 years ago, which means that there is no evidence for human language for nearly 99% of the time that humans were living in Asia. (Ha! See rsr.org/origin-of-language for the correct explanation.) - sequence a baby's genome and rewrite human history with a 6-week old girl buried in Alaska allegedly 11,500 years ago challenging the established history of the New World. (The family buried this baby girl just beneath their home like the practice in ancient Mesopotamia, the Hebrews who sojourned in Egypt, and in Çatalhöyük in southern Turkey, one of the world's most ancient settlements.) - or was that 130,000? years ago as the journal Nature rewrites human history with a wild date for New World site - and find a jawbone and rewrite human history with a modern looking yet allegedly 180,000-year-old jawbone from Israel which "may rewrite the early migration story of our species" by about 100,000 years, per the journal Science - re-date a primate and lose yet another "missing link" between "Lucy" and humans, as Homo naledi sheds a couple million years off its age and drops from supposedly two million years old to (still allegedly) about 250,000 years old, far too "young" to be the allegedly missing link - re-analysis of the "best candidate" for the most recent ancestor to human beings, Australopithecus sediba, turns out to be a juvenile Lucy-like ape, as Science magazine reports work presented at the American Association of Physical Anthropologists 2017 annual meeting - find skulls in Morocco and "rewrite human history" admits the journal Nature, falsifying also the "East Africa" part of the canonical story - and from the You Can't Make This Stuff Up file, NPR reports in April 2019, Ancient Bones And Teeth Found In A Philippine Cave May Rewrite Human History. :) - Meanwhile, whereas every new discovery requires the materialists to rewrite human history, no one has had to rewrite Genesis, not even once. Yet, "We're not claiming that the Bible is a science textbook. Not at all. For the textbooks have to be rewritten all the time!"  - And even this from Science: "humans mastered the art of training and controlling dogs thousands of years earlier than previously thought."- RSR's Enyart commented on the Smithsonian's 2019 article on ancient DNA possibly deconstructing old myths...  This Smithsonian article about an ancient DNA paper in Science Advances, or actually, about the misuse of such papers, was itself a misuse. The published research, Ancient DNA sheds light on the genetic origins of early Iron Age Philistines, confirmed Amos 9:7 by documenting the European origin of the biblical Philistines who came from the island of Caphtor/Crete. The mainstream media completely obscured this astounding aspect of the study but the Smithsonian actually stood the paper on its head. [See also rsr.org/archaeology.]* Also Squeezing Darwin's Theory: - Evolution happens so slowly that we can't see it, yet - it happens so fast that millions of mutations get fixed in a blink of geologic time AND: - Observing a million species annually should show us a million years of evolution, but it doesn't, yet - evolution happens so fast that the billions of "intermediary" fossils are missing AND: - Waiting for helpful random mutations to show up explains the slowness of evolution, yet - adaption to changing environments is often immediate, as with Darwin's finches Finches Adapt in 17 Years, Not 2.3 Million: Charles Darwin's finches are claimed to have taken 2,300,000 years to diversify from an initial species blown onto the Galapagos Islands. Yet individuals from a single finch species on a U.S. Bird Reservation in the Pacific were introduced to a group of small islands 300 miles away and in at most 17 years, like Darwin's finches, they had diversified their beaks, related muscles, and behavior to fill various ecological niches. So Darwin's finches could diversify in just 17 years, and after 2.3 million more years, what had they evolved into? Finches! Hear this also at rsr.org/lee-spetner and see Jean Lightner's review of the Grants' 40 Years. AND: - Fossils of modern organisms are found "earlier" and "earlier" in the geologic column, and - the "oldest" organisms are increasingly found to have anatomical, proteinaceous, prokaryotic, and eukaryotic sophistication and similarity to "modern" organisms AND: - Small populations are in danger of extinction (yet they're needed to fix mutations), whereas - large populations make it impossible for a mutation to become standard AND: - Mutations that express changes too late in an organism's development can't effect its fundamental body plan, and - mutations expressed too early in an organism's development are fatal (hence among the Enyart sayings, "Like evolving a vital organ, most major hurdles for evolutionary theory are extinction-level events.") AND: - To evolve flight, you'd get bad legs - long before you'd get good wings AND: - Most major evolutionary hurdles appear to be extinction-level events- yet somehow even *vital* organs evolve (for many species, that includes reproductive organs, skin, brain, heart, circulatory system, kidney, liver, pancreas, stomach, small intestines, large intestines, lungs -- which are only a part of the complex respiration system) AND: - Natural selection of randomly taller, swifter, etc., fish, mammals, etc. explains evolution yet - development of microscopic molecular machines, feedback mechanisms, etc., which power biology would be oblivous to what's happening in Darwin's macro environment of the entire organism AND: - Neo-Darwinism suggests genetic mutation as the engine of evolution yet - the there is not even a hypothesis for modifying the vast non-genetic information in every living cell including the sugar code, electrical code, the spatial (geometric) code, and the epigenetic code AND: - Constant appeals to "convergent" evolution (repeatedly arising vision, echolocation, warm-bloodedness, etc.) - undermine most Darwinian anatomical classification especially those based on trivialities like odd or even-toed ungulates, etc. AND: - Claims that given a single species arising by abiogenesis, then - Darwinism can explain the diversification of life, ignores the science of ecology and the (often redundant) biological services that species rely upon AND: - humans' vastly superior intelligence indicates, as bragged about for decades by Darwinists, that ape hominids should have the greatest animal intelligence, except that - many so-called "primitive" creatures and those far distant on Darwin's tee of life, exhibit extraordinary rsr.org/animal-intelligence even to processing stimuli that some groups of apes cannot AND: - Claims that the tree of life emerges from a single (or a few) common ancestors - conflict with the discoveries of multiple genetic codes and of thousands of orphan genes that have no similarity (homology) to any other known genes AND (as in the New Scientist cover story, "Darwin Was Wrong about the tree of life", etc.): - DNA sequences have contradicted anatomy-based ancestry claims - Fossil-based ancestry claims have been contradicted by RNA claims - DNA-based ancestry claims have been contradicted by anatomy claims - Protein-based ancestry claims have been contradicted by fossil claims. - And the reverse problem compared to a squeeze. Like finding the largest mall in America built to house just a kid's lemonade stand, see rsr.org/200 for the astounding lack of genetic diversity in humans, plants, and animals, so much so that it could all be accounted for in just about 200 generations! - The multiplied things that evolved multiple times - Etc. * List of Ways Darwinists Invent their Tree of Life, aka Pop Goes the Weasle – Head and Shoulders, Knees and Toes: Evolutionists change their selection of what evidence they use to show 'lineage', from DNA to fossils to genes to body plans to teeth to many specific anatomical features to proteins to behavior to developmental similarities to habitat to RNA, etc. and to a combination of such. Darwinism is an entire endeavor based on selection bias, a kind of logical fallacy. By anti-science they arbitrarily select evidence that best matches whichever evolutionary story is currently preferred." -Bob E. The methodology used to create the family tree edifice to show evolutionary relationships classifies the descent of organisms based on such attributes as odd-toed and even-toed ungulates. Really? If something as wildly sophisticated as vision allegedly evolved multiple times (a dozen or more), then for cryin' out loud, why couldn't something as relatively simple as odd or even toes repeatedly evolve? How about dinosaur's evolving eggs with hard shells? Turns out that "hard-shelled eggs evolved at least three times independently in dinosaurs" (Nature, 2020). However, whether a genus has an odd or even number of toes, and similar distinctions, form the basis for the 150-year-old Darwinist methodology. Yet its leading proponents still haven't acknowledged that their tree building is arbitrary and invalid. Darwin's tree recently fell anyway, and regardless, it has been known to be even theoretically invalid all these many decades. Consider also bipedalism? In their false paradigm, couldn't that evolve twice? How about vertebrate and non-vertebrates, for that matter, evolving multiple times? Etc., etc., etc. Darwinists determine evolutionary family-tree taxonomic relationships based on numbers of toes, when desired, or on hips (distinguishing, for example, dinosaur orders, until they didn't) or limb bones, or feathers, or genes, or fossil sequence, or neck bone, or..., or..., or... Etc. So the platypus, for example, can be described as evolving from pretty much whatever story would be in vogue at the moment...   * "Ancient" Protein as Advanced as Modern Protein: A book review in the journal Science states, "the major conclusion is reached that 'analyses made of the oldest fossils thus far studied do not suggest that their [allegedly 145-million year-old] proteins were chemically any simpler than those now being produced.'" 1972, Biochemistry of Animal Fossils, p. 125 * "Ancient" Lampreys Just Modern Lampreys with Decomposed Brain and Mouth Parts: Ha! Researches spent half-a-year documenting how fish decay. RSR is so glad they did! One of the lessons learned? "[C]ertain parts of the brain and the mouth that distinguish the animals from earlier relatives begin a rapid decay within 24 hours..." :) * 140-million Year Old Spider Web: The BBC and National Geographic report on a 140-million year old spider web in amber which, as young-earth creationists expect, shows threads that resemble silk spun by modern spiders. Evolutionary scientists on the otherhand express surprise "that spider webs have stayed the same for 140 million years." And see the BBC. * Highly-Credentialed Though Non-Paleontologist on Flowers: Dr. Harry Levin who spent the last 15 years of a brilliant career researching paleontology presents much evidence that flowering plants had to originate not 150 million years ago but more than 300 million years ago. (To convert that to an actual historical timeframe, the evidence indicates flowers must have existed prior to the time that the strata, which is popularly dated to 300 mya, actually formed.) * Rampant Convergence: Ubiquitous appeals to "convergent" evolution (vision, echolocation, warm-bloodedness, icthyosaur/dolphin anatomy, etc.), all allegedly evolving multiple times, undermines anatomical classification based on trivialities like odd or even-toed ungulates, etc. * Astronomy's Big Evolution Squeeze: - Universe a billion, wait, two billion, years younger than thought   (so now it has to evolve even more impossibly rapidly) - Sun's evolution squeezes biological evolution - Galaxies evolving too quickly - Dust evolving too quickly - Black holes evolving too quickly - Clusters of galaxies evolving too quickly. * The Sun's Evolution Squeezes Life's Evolution: The earlier evolutionists claim that life began on Earth, the more trouble they have with astrophysicists. Why? They claim that a few billion years ago the Sun would have been far more unstable and cooler. The journal Nature reports that the Faint young Sun paradox remains for the "Sun was fainter when the Earth was young, but the climate was generally at least as warm as today". Further, our star would shoot out radioactive waves many of which being violent enough to blow out Earth's atmosphere into space, leaving Earth dead and dry like Mars without an atmosphere. And ignoring the fact that powerful computer simulators cannot validate the nebula theory of star formation, if the Sun had formed from a condensing gas cloud, a billion years later it still would have been emitting far less energy, even 30% less, than it does today. Forget about the claimed one-degree increase in the planet's temperature from man-made global warming, back when Darwinists imagine life arose, by this just-so story of life spontaneously generating in a warm pond somewhere (which itself is impossible), the Earth would have been an ice ball, with an average temperature of four degrees Fahrenheit below freezing! See also CMI's video download The Young Sun. * Zircons Freeze in Molten Eon Squeezing Earth's Evolution? Zircons "dated" 4 to 4.4 billion years old would have had to freeze (form) when the Earth allegedly was in its Hadean (Hades) Eon and still molten. Geophysicist Frank Stacey (Cambridge fellow, etc.) has suggested they may have formed above ocean trenches where it would be coolest. One problem is that even further squeezes the theory of plate tectonics requiring it to operate two billion years before otherwise claimed. A second problem (for these zircons and the plate tectonics theory itself) is that ancient trenches (now filled with sediments; others raised up above sea level; etc.) have never been found. A third problem is that these zircons contain low isotope ratios of carbon-13 to carbon-12 which evolutionists may try to explain as evidence for life existing even a half-billion years before they otherwise claim. For more about this (and to understand how these zircons actually did form) just click and then search (ctrl-f) for: zircon character. * Evolution Squeezes Life to Evolve with Super Radioactivity: Radioactivity today breaks chromosomes and produces neutral, harmful, and fatal birth defects. Dr. Walt Brown reports that, "A 160-pound person experiences 2,500 carbon-14 disintegrations each second", with about 10 disintergrations per second in our DNA. Worse for evolutionists is that, "Potassium-40 is the most abundant radioactive substance in... every living thing." Yet the percentage of Potassium that was radioactive in the past would have been far in excess of its percent today. (All this is somewhat akin to screws in complex machines changing into nails.) So life would have had to arise from inanimate matter (an impossibility of course) when it would have been far more radioactive than today. * Evolution of Uranium Squeezed by Contrasting Constraints: Uranium's two most abundant isotopes have a highly predictable ratio with 235U/238U equaling 0.007257 with a standard deviation of only 0.000017. Big bang advocates claim that these isotopes formed in distant stellar cataclysms. Yet that these isotopes somehow collected in innumerable small ore bodies in a fixed ratio is absurd. The impossibility of the "big bang" explanation of the uniformity of the uranium ratio (rsr.org/bb#ratio) simultaneously contrasts in the most shocking way with its opposite impossibility of the missing uniform distribution of radioactivity (see rsr.org/bb#distribution) with 90% of Earth's radioactivity in the Earth's crust, actually, the continental crust, and even at that, preferentially near granite! A stellar-cataclysmic explanation within the big bang paradigm for the origin of uranium is severely squeezed into being falsified by these contrasting constraints. * Remarkable Sponges? Yes, But For What Reason? Study co-author Dr. Kenneth S. Kosik, the Harriman Professor of Neuroscience at UC Santa Barbara said, "Remarkably, the sponge genome now reveals that, along the way toward the emergence of animals, genes for an entire network of many specialized cells evolved and laid the basis for the core gene logic of organisms that no longer functioned as single cells." And then there's this: these simplest of creatures have manufacturing capabilities that far exceed our own, as Degnan says, "Sponges produce an amazing array of chemicals of direct interest to the pharmaceutical industry. They also biofabricate silica fibers directly from seawater in an environmentally benign manner, which is of great interest in communications [i.e., fiber optics]. With the genome in hand, we can decipher the methods used by these simple animals to produce materials that far exceed our current engineering and chemistry capabilities." Kangaroo Flashback: From our RSR Darwin's Other Shoe program: The director of Australia's Kangaroo Genomics Centre, Jenny Graves, that "There [are] great chunks of the human genome… sitting right there in the kangaroo genome." And the 20,000 genes in the kangaroo (roughly the same number as in humans) are "largely the same" as in people, and Graves adds, "a lot of them are in the same order!" CMI's Creation editors add that "unlike chimps, kangaroos are not supposed to be our 'close relatives.'" And "Organisms as diverse as leeches and lawyers are 'built' using the same developmental genes." So Darwinists were wrong to use that kind of genetic similarity as evidence of a developmental pathway from apes to humans. Hibernating Turtles: Question to the evolutionist: What happened to the first turtles that fell asleep hibernating underwater? SHOW UPDATE Of Mice and Men: Whereas evolutionists used a very superficial claim of chimpanzee and human genetic similarity as evidence of a close relationship, mice and men are pretty close also. From the Human Genome Project, How closely related are mice and humans?, "Mice and humans (indeed, most or all mammals including dogs, cats, rabbits, monkeys, and apes) have roughly the same number of nucleotides in their genomes -- about 3 billion base pairs. This comparable DNA content implies that all mammals [RSR: like roundworms :)] contain more or less the same number of genes, and indeed our work and the work of many others have provided evidence to confirm that notion. I know of only a few cases in which no mouse counterpart can be found for a particular human gene, and for the most part we see essentially a one-to-one correspondence between genes in the two species." * Related RSR Reports: See our reports on the fascinating DNA sequencing results from roundworms and the chimpanzee's Y chromosome! * Genetic Bottleneck, etc: Here's an excerpt from rsr.org/why-was-canaan-cursed... A prediction about the worldwide distribution of human genetic sequencing (see below) is an outgrowth of the Bible study at that same link (aka rsr.org/canaan), in that scientists will discover a genetic pattern resulting from not three but four sons of Noah's wife. Relevant information comes also from mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) which is not part of any of our 46 chromosomes but resides outside of the nucleus. Consider first some genetic information about Jews and Arabs, Jewish priests, Eve, and Noah. Jews and Arabs Biblical Ancestry: Dr. Jonathan Sarfati quotes the director of the Human Genetics Program at New York University School of Medicine, Dr. Harry Ostrer, who in 2000 said: Jews and Arabs are all really children of Abraham … And all have preserved their Middle Eastern genetic roots over 4,000 years. This familiar pattern, of the latest science corroborating biblical history, continues in Dr. Sarfati's article, Genesis correctly predicts Y-Chromosome pattern: Jews and Arabs shown to be descendants of one man. Jewish Priests Share Genetic Marker: The journal Nature in its scientific correspondence published, Y Chromosomes of Jewish Priests, by scie

america god jesus christ university california head canada black world lord australia europe israel earth uk china science bible men future space land living new york times professor nature africa european arizona green evolution search dna mind mit medicine universe study mars san diego jewish table bbc harvard nasa turkey cnn journal natural sun human color jews theory prof tree alaska hebrews fruit oxford caribbean independent plant millions worse mass npr scientists abortion genius trees cambridge pacific complex flowers egyptian ancient conservatives shocking surprising grandma dust dinosaurs hebrew whales neuroscience mat butterflies relevant new world turtles claims sanders resource constant rapid needless national geographic new york university protein evolve morocco queensland babel financial times wing legs graves hades grandpa absence infants west africa levy 100m skull ham big bang american association squeeze middle eastern grants knees smithsonian astronomy mice toes uv levine std observing shoulders middle ages homo tb east africa calif fahrenheit galileo philistines biochemistry mutation charles darwin evo rna evolutionary erwin book of mormon fossil american indian lds univ arabs neanderthals jellyfish american journal crete mesopotamia 3b proceedings insect traces fungus 500m afp clarification levites beetle great barrier reef genome pritchard sponge piranhas faint molecular biology cohn uranium mantis uc santa barbara acs fossils galaxies syrians correspondence primitive shem show updates university college parrots darwinism darwinian natural history museum squeezing analyses brun camouflage clusters new scientist potassium kagan fixation kohn galapagos islands expires levinson hand washing smithsonian magazine of mice cowen ubiquitous french alps eon oregon health kogan science university aristotelian human genome project quotations pop goes cretaceous sponges calibrating cambrian astrobiology cmi pnas brian thomas harkins soft tissue journalcode human genome semites spores science advances science daily phys biomedical research radioactivity harkin current biology researches finches ignaz semmelweis cng blubber redirectedfrom mammalian evolutionists mycobacterium ancient dna rsr australopithecus icr see dr semmelweis myr cambrian explosion make this stuff up stephen jay gould analytical chemistry cephalopod darwinists trilobites bobe sciencealert antarctic peninsula royal society b dravidian degnan y chromosome nature genetics mtdna nature ecology whitehead institute peking man arthropod intelligent designer technical institute these jews haemoglobin eocene eukaryotes hadean physical anthropology haifa israel mitochondrial eve neo darwinism enyart jonathan park walt brown japeth early cretaceous hadrosaur palaeozoic ann gibbons dna mtdna jenny graves maynard-smith physical anthropologists real science radio human genetics program kenneth s kosik kgov
SALTovation: Making Sense of State and Local Tax
The Evolution of IPT: Why Tax Education is So Important with Chris Muntifering (Part 2)

SALTovation: Making Sense of State and Local Tax

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2024 20:47 Transcription Available


In this episode of the SALTovation podcast, we continue our conversation with Chris Muntifering, Executive Director at the Institute for Professionals in Taxation. We explore the role of the Institute for Professionals in Taxation (IPT) and its unique position in the landscape of tax organizations, highlighting how it distinguishes itself from competitors like the Council of State Taxation. Chris discusses the rigorous process behind IPT's advocacy efforts, including the criteria for supporting cases that benefit its members and the importance of engaging younger professionals as the landscape of tax professionals continues to evolve.Key Takeaways:The CMI program emphasizes the importance of both experience and education in taxation roles.IPT aims to support its members by providing resources and guiding them through tax issues.The process of submitting amicus brief requests is detailed and requires careful consideration.IPT is focused on education while other organizations may also engage in advocacy efforts.Engaging younger professionals is a key initiative for the future success of IPT.The CMI exam is designed to test both knowledge and practical experience in the field.ConnectSubscribe on your favorite podcast app here.Follow us on LinkedIn and YouTube.Talk to a Tax Advocate Today!Mentioned in this episode:Sales Tax NerdAre you a Sales Tax Nerd? Do you feel alone in your work? Do others understand what you deal with on a daily basis? Are you looking for your “people”? You need to check out The Sales Tax Nerd Community! It brings together helpful resources, ongoing training, and camaraderie. With free webinars, on-demand courses, and quarterly Office Hours with the original Sales Tax Nerd, Diane Yetter, you're never short on accessible information and relief from the chaos of sales tax. Get your toughest questions answered by knowledgeable members of the community. Network with peers, access exclusive content, get discounts on our live courses, and gain over 28 CPE credits each year. Click the Sales Tax Institute link in the description, and use the code SALTOV10 for 10% off your membership today! https://www.salestaxinstitute.com/sales-tax-education/sales-tax-nerd-community-membershipTax NerdSALT Contact

La Hora de la Verdad
Al Oído noviembre 15 de 2024

La Hora de la Verdad

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2024 10:09


Lo que dijo el presidente de la JEP sobre el caso de las FARC y las violaciones. Creo que debemos presentarlo. Yo disto del concepto de Vargas Quemba porque no pagarán cárcel. La JEP no lo contempla El Ministerio de la Igualdad no hace nada. Solo gastar La declaración de Marco Rubio La salida de Vicky Dávila y lo que será su campaña La nueva propuesta de Petro. Acción climática Última emisión de CMI la noticia Roa de Ecopetrol propone que el Estado recompre las acciones en poder de los ciudadanos. La grosería del Ministro de Salud Icetex aún no tiene plata para nuevos créditosEl primer foro del Centro Democrático Los F16 o los gripen Marcha del 23 Noviembre

The Association 100 Podcast
Driving Sustainability Through Community and Innovation

The Association 100 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2024 39:46


In this episode of The A100 Podcast, host Colleen Gallagher speaks with Tim Ebner, Director of Communications & Marketing at the Can Manufacturers Institute (CMI). Tim brings a wealth of experience from his background in journalism and association communications to champion sustainability and innovation in the metal can industry. Through initiatives like the “2 Million Cans Recycling Contest” and “Every Can Counts,” Tim and his team at CMI are creating powerful community engagement and awareness around the environmental impact of metal cans. Key Highlights: Sustainability with Impact: Tim shares how CMI is driving sustainability by promoting the circular economy of aluminum and steel cans, which can be recycled infinitely. This commitment to reducing waste is supported by ambitious goals to improve recycling rates and reduce the carbon footprint of metal cans by 2030, 2040 and 2050. Engaging Communities through the 2 Million Cans Contest: CMI's “2 Million Cans Recycling Contest” is an educational and community-focused initiative that partners with schools to teach students about recycling and sustainability. Tim discusses how this grassroots campaign not only recycles cans but also reinvests in local communities, creating a tangible impact that reinforces the importance of environmental stewardship. AI-Driven Recycling Innovation: CMI is also exploring AI technology to boost recycling rates. Tim explains how optical-sorting robots identify and sort aluminum cans at recycling facilities, ensuring these valuable materials are correctly processed and reintegrated into the circular economy. This tech-forward approach demonstrates CMI's dedication to integrating innovation in sustainability efforts. Check out this Axios article: AI robot helps recover and recycle beverage cans Bringing Your Whole Self to Work: Tim emphasizes the importance of blending personal passions with professional roles. He encourages association professionals to explore creative interests outside of work, as these pursuits can bring fresh perspectives and innovative ideas to their daily roles. Join us as Tim Ebner shares valuable insights on how associations can foster community engagement, promote sustainability and leverage creativity to drive industry impact. Stay Connected: Subscribe to The Association 100 podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts or YouTube Podcasts to ensure you never miss an episode. Follow us on LinkedIn at The Association 100 and OnWrd & UpWrd for the latest in association trends and strategies. Tune in for more episodes featuring expert insights to drive your association's advocacy and mission forward!

DISCIPLINED STONERS
Luther Mallory - Ep.218 - Disciplined Stoners Podcast

DISCIPLINED STONERS

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2024 134:45


WOW! Luther is an Artist Performance Coach, Keynote Speaker and Music Artist. He is an expert in teaching Stage Presence to Performing Artists and Business Professionals. His focus is on the psychological barriers holding people back from accessing their most fearless and confident selves on stage. He is the Performance Coach for two of Canada's most acclaimed music artist development programs - The JUNO Masterclass and CMI's Artist Entrepreneur Programs in Toronto and Calgary. Over the last decade, Luther has coached over 1000+ artists including JUNO Award and Polaris Prize winners, major label and independent artists of every genre, and more than 50 artists that have since achieved 1 million+ Spotify streams. Thank you so much for watching/listening to our podcast. We are here to learn and offer valuable information about the cannabis and wellness space! Please like this video and subscribe for weekly podcasts, meditations, and affirmations. Follow us on Instagram: Disciplined Stoners: https://www.instagram.com/disciplinedstoners Winny Clarke: https://www.instagram.com/winnyclarke Ellevan: https://www.instagram.com/ellevanmusic Sign up for Winny's Mailing List here: http://eepurl.com/gCIZg1 Get Ellevan's book: STFU: Thoughts and Feelings shorturl.at/pIS08 Follow us on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1XDoMv08pT9EfyBaCXNnaj?si=7a557f0e0bf14d4d Follow and Listen to Ellevan on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/0G1sZ8clT2oSvzQ3IL2ZRd?si=vJVw9FLyS6GtF453Ny21kQ Every episode we travel deeper into unfolding who we believe we are. Through these conversations of self reflection, often comedic, often topical, always grounded, we try to uncover a deeper meaning to this life. Thank you for joining us on this special discovery and we hope to continue to inspire you and the choices you make to better your life. You are loved. You are well. We are growing. Love n Light #podcast #mindfulness #mindfulpodcast #podcasting #comedy #fun #podcasting #wellness #meditation #disciplines #entrepreneur

Minimum Competence
Legal News for Fri 11/8 - No Personal Liability for Zuckerberg, OpenAI Copyright Lawsuit Win, Ruling Blocks Biden Immigration Program and Giuliani Faces Contempt

Minimum Competence

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2024 13:06


This Day in Legal History: Beer Hall PutschOn November 8, 1923, Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party launched a failed coup known as the Beer Hall Putsch in Munich, Germany. Hitler, alongside other far-right leaders, sought to overthrow the Weimar Republic by forcibly taking control of the Bavarian government and inspiring a national revolution. The plan was set into motion when Hitler and his supporters stormed a Munich beer hall where Bavarian officials were gathered, intending to coerce them into backing the coup. However, the attempt quickly unraveled. As the Nazis marched through Munich, they were met with resistance from police forces, resulting in a violent confrontation that left 15 Nazi supporters and four police officers dead. The coup collapsed within hours, and Hitler was subsequently arrested and tried for treason. Sentenced to five years in prison, he served only one but used this time to dictate Mein Kampf, a manifesto outlining his extremist ideology and future plans for Germany. Though the Beer Hall Putsch was a tactical failure, it marked a significant turning point for Hitler and the Nazi Party. The publicity surrounding Hitler's trial and imprisonment gave him a national platform, which he used to spread his message and gain a wider following. The failed coup illustrated both the fragility of the Weimar Republic and the determination of extremist groups to challenge democratic governance in Germany, foreshadowing the political upheaval that would follow in the coming years.A federal judge has once again dismissed claims seeking to hold Mark Zuckerberg personally responsible in multiple lawsuits accusing Meta and other social media companies of causing addictive behavior in children. US District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers found that the updated complaints failed to meet the legal standards required to establish Zuckerberg's individual liability. While this ruling removes Zuckerberg as an individual defendant, it does not affect the ongoing claims against Meta as a company. Plaintiffs argue that Zuckerberg ignored internal warnings from Meta employees regarding the potential dangers of Instagram and Facebook for younger users, allegedly concealing this information from the public.Corporate law traditionally shields CEOs from personal liability, making it challenging to hold Zuckerberg accountable without clear evidence of direct involvement. Judge Rogers noted that, although future evidence might reveal more direct actions by Zuckerberg, the present allegations do not meet the threshold for corporate officer liability. This legal action is part of a broader litigation effort, involving over 1,000 lawsuits by families and school districts in California against Meta, Google, ByteDance, and Snap, alleging similar harms related to social media addiction among adolescents.Zuckerberg Avoids Personal Liability in Meta Addiction SuitsA federal judge in New York dismissed a copyright lawsuit brought by news outlets Raw Story and AlterNet against OpenAI, ruling that the plaintiffs had not shown a concrete injury. The outlets argued that OpenAI unlawfully used their articles to train its AI models, including ChatGPT, and violated the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) by removing copyright management information (CMI) from the articles, such as author names and copyright notices. However, U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon determined that removing CMI alone, without further dissemination or significant harm, did not meet the required threshold for legal standing under the DMCA.Judge McMahon permitted the plaintiffs to submit an amended complaint but expressed skepticism about their ability to present a valid claim. According to McMahon, the real issue seemed to be the uncompensated use of the articles for training purposes rather than the removal of CMI. Although Raw Story and AlterNet attorney Matt Topic stated confidence in addressing the court's concerns through amendments, McMahon warned that the case might lack a viable legal theory under current copyright laws. This lawsuit aligns with a broader wave of legal actions from media, authors, and artists who are challenging AI companies over the use of copyrighted material in model training. In a related development, The New York Times filed a similar lawsuit against OpenAI in December, marking the first major challenge from a media outlet over AI training practices.OpenAI Defeats Raw Story Copyright, Training Lawsuit, for NowOpenAI defeats news outlets' copyright lawsuit over AI training, for now | ReutersA federal judge in Texas has struck down President Biden's immigration program aimed at providing a citizenship path for certain undocumented immigrants married to U.S. citizens. The "Keeping Families Together" initiative, announced in June, targeted approximately 500,000 individuals but faced immediate legal challenges from Texas and several Republican-led states. U.S. District Judge J. Campbell Barker ruled that the program overstepped Biden's executive authority, leaving it blocked as Biden's term nears its end.The initiative has been a focal point in the political landscape, with immigration considered a top priority issue. Former President Donald Trump, who defeated Vice President Kamala Harris in the recent election, is expected to implement strict immigration policies, including potential rollbacks of Biden's program. A recent Reuters/Ipsos poll indicates that Americans expect Trump to prioritize immigration enforcement, with many anticipating large-scale deportations. While the Biden administration could appeal the ruling, the White House has not yet commented on potential next steps.US judge rules against Biden legalization program for immigrant spouses | ReutersA federal judge has warned Rudy Giuliani, former New York City mayor and attorney for Donald Trump, that he could be held in civil contempt if he doesn't comply with a court order to surrender certain assets. Giuliani was ordered in October to turn over property, including his Manhattan apartment and other valuables, to Ruby Freeman and her daughter Shaye Moss, two Georgia election workers whom he defamed. Freeman and Moss won a $148 million judgment against Giuliani after a jury found he had spread false accusations that they helped rig the 2020 election.Judge Lewis Liman expressed frustration with Giuliani's delays, giving him until next week to meet the court's demands. The plaintiffs' attorney, Aaron Nathan, suggested Giuliani may be shifting assets to avoid collection, including opening new bank accounts and forming a new LLC. Giuliani, meanwhile, claims he is cooperating and accused the plaintiffs of being vindictive, citing their attempt to seize a family heirloom watch. Judge Liman dismissed that argument, affirming that the heirloom was still subject to seizure under the law.Giuliani recently filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, but his case was dismissed after he failed to disclose his full financial situation, removing his legal protections from creditors. This comes as Giuliani faces broader legal challenges, including disbarment and criminal charges related to efforts to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia and Arizona.US judge threatens Rudy Giuliani with contempt in election workers' case | ReutersThis week's closing theme is by Antonín Dvořák.This week's closing theme is Antonín Dvořák's Piano Quintet No. 2 in A Major, Op. 81, one of the most beloved chamber works in the Romantic repertoire. Composed in 1887, this quintet exemplifies Dvořák's talent for weaving Czech folk music elements into classical forms, creating a vibrant work filled with expressive melodies and rhythmic vitality. Dvořák had already achieved international acclaim by this time, and his music was celebrated for its distinctive blend of Slavic folk traditions and classical elegance. In this quintet, he masterfully combines lyrical beauty with an earthy, folk-inspired character, making it both accessible and profoundly moving.The piece opens with an Allegro ma non tanto, which means “fast, but not too much,” where a lush cello theme sets a warm and expansive mood that's developed between the strings and piano. The second movement, a Dumka, draws on a traditional Slavic musical form that alternates between melancholic and lively sections, allowing for both introspection and joy. Dvořák contrasts this with a lively Furiant for the third movement, featuring energetic cross-rhythms that mimic Czech dance patterns, adding excitement and rhythmic playfulness.The quintet closes with a spirited Finale, where Dvořák's signature energy and folk influences shine through in a triumphant, sweeping conclusion. Throughout, the dialogue between piano and strings feels rich and conversational, each instrument playing a unique role in the music's storytelling. The Piano Quintet No. 2 captures Dvořák at the height of his compositional powers, blending technical mastery with deep national pride and an unmistakable Romantic warmth. It's an ideal selection to end the week on a vibrant and emotionally rich note, as Dvořák's music reminds us of the beauty in blending tradition with innovation.Without further ado, Antonín Dvořák's Piano Quintet No. 2 in A Major, Op. 81, enjoy.  This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.minimumcomp.com/subscribe

PNR: This Old Marketing | Content Marketing with Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose
2025 Content Marketing Trends [Special Episode] (451)

PNR: This Old Marketing | Content Marketing with Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2024 49:12


The boys go deep into CMI's 2025 content marketing research report. While the results look pretty similar to last year's report, Joe and Robert offer some prescriptions for 2025 content marketing strategies, including: Think more local in 2025 Who's your "with"? Paid promotion of content for the win Less is more Time to kill some things Let's get risky in 2025 See the full research here. ----- This week's sponsor: With smaller budgets and sky-high expectations — growth is feeling pretty painful right now. But HubSpot just announced more than 200 major product updates to make impossible growth feel impossibly easy. Like Breeze — a suite of new AI-powered tools that help you say goodbye to busywork and hello to better work. Breeze Intelligence — to give you the richest, most comprehensive picture of your prospects and customers. And reimagined Marketing and Content Hubs — to attract and convert more leads, and send your revenue soaring.  - Hubspot.com/ ------- Liked this show? SUBSCRIBE to this podcast on Spotify, Apple, Google and more. Catch past episodes and show notes at ThisOldMarketing.com. Catch and subscribe to our NEW show on YouTube. NOTE: You can get captions there. Subscribe to Joe Pulizzi's Orangeletter and get two free downloads direct from Joe. Subscribe to Robert Rose's newsletter at Experience Advisors.    

Rockstar CMO FM
The 5 Fundamentals of Buyers' Journeys and Careers over a Cocktail Episode

Rockstar CMO FM

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2024 61:38


This week Jeff Clark and Ian Truscott discuss Jeff's 5 Fundamentals of Buyers' Journeys: Chose a Published Model that works for your business  Data is the Ultimate Key to Success Journey Tracking Can Predict Ability to Close  The Devil is in Persona-level Details Journey Tracking Ensures Campaign Success Ian then joins Robert Rose, the Chief Troublemaker at The Content Advisory, in the Rockstar CMO virtual bar and, over a splendid cocktail, Robert shares his take on the current state of marketing careers based on some recent research.   Enjoy! — The people: Ian Truscott on LinkedIn  Jeff Clark on LinkedIn Robert Rose on LinkedIn and Threads Mentioned in this week's episode: Buyers journey research: Adweek:  The State of the Enterprise B2B Buyers Journey Forrester - Younger B2B Buyers Google: B2B marketing: Connecting with new & existing business buyers Robert's firm: The Content Advisory Robert's podcast – This Old Marketing Robert's CMI article series - Rose Colored Glasses Rockstar CMO: Monday Mojo - our monthly LinkedIn Newsletter The Beat Newsletter that we send every Sunday Rockstar CMO on the web, Twitter, and LinkedIn Previous episodes and all the show notes: Rockstar CMO FM. Track List: Piano Music is by Johnny Easton, shared under a Creative Commons license We'll be right back by Stienski & Mass Media on YouTube The Journey by Fat Boy Slim on YouTube Surf Rider by The Lively Ones on YouTube Listen on Apple, Amazon, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

PNR: This Old Marketing | Content Marketing with Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose

Joe and Robert unpack Google's NotebookLM and how the AI audio machine has taken over the internet. Listen to the sample and see if you think it's usable. In other Google news, the DOJ is trying to break up Google into smaller pieces for better competition. This happens at the same time Google is losing its strength in the search market. And someone used Meta's glasses to instantly dox strangers. Should we be scared? Yes...yes we should. Winners and losers include Mountain Dew and Wordpress. Rants and raves include TikTok and CMI's latest benchmark study. This week's links: Google's Notebook LM Google Faces the DOJ Google's Domination as Search Leader Going Away? Meta's Glasses Used to Dox Strangers Mountain Dew's New Brand WordPress Community In Trouble? TikTok Sued Again ----- This week's sponsor: With smaller budgets and sky-high expectations — growth is feeling pretty painful right now. But HubSpot just announced more than 200 major product updates to make impossible growth feel impossibly easy. Like Breeze — a suite of new AI-powered tools that help you say goodbye to busywork and hello to better work. Breeze Intelligence — to give you the richest, most comprehensive picture of your prospects and customers. And reimagined Marketing and Content Hubs — to attract and convert more leads, and send your revenue soaring.  - Hubspot.com/ ------- Liked this show? SUBSCRIBE to this podcast on Spotify, Apple, Google and more. Catch past episodes and show notes at ThisOldMarketing.com. Catch and subscribe to our NEW show on YouTube. NOTE: You can get captions there. Subscribe to Joe Pulizzi's Orangeletter and get two free downloads direct from Joe. Subscribe to Robert Rose's newsletter at Experience Advisors.  

Content Inc with Joe Pulizzi
You Need More No In Your Strategy (466)

Content Inc with Joe Pulizzi

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2024 4:28


I'm sure you are creating and distributing content everywhere. But is that the right move? Maybe your strategy should be more about no, than yes.  In this episode we dive into the research to see what is really working in content creation and audience building. ------- Like this episode? SUBSCRIBE on Apple, Spotify or Google. See all Content Inc episodes at the Content Inc. podcast home. Get my personal newsletter today and receive my free goal-setting guide today.

Rockstar CMO FM
The 5 Steps to Making Campaigns and Experiments in Notebook LM Episode

Rockstar CMO FM

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2024 62:09


This week Jeff Clark is back in the Marketing Studio, and he and Ian Truscott discuss his 5 steps for launching integrated marketing campaigns, including: Identifying Customer Needs Defining the Audience Setting Campaign Goals Forming the Campaign Team Planning the Program and Tactics Executing and Measuring Success Ian then joins Robert Rose, the Chief Troublemaker at The Content Advisory, in the Rockstar CMO virtual bar and, over a cocktail, shares his experiments with Notebook LM and what this kind of AI tool means for marketers.  Enjoy! — The people: Ian Truscott on LinkedIn  Jeff Clark on LinkedIn Robert Rose on LinkedIn and Threads Mentioned in this week's episode: Ian's Tuesday 2¢ LinkedIn Newsletter Notebook LM Robert Frost - The Road Not Taken Robert's firm: The Content Advisory Robert's podcast – This Old Marketing Robert's CMI article series - Rose Colored Glasses Rockstar CMO: Monday Mojo - our monthly LinkedIn Newsletter The Beat Newsletter that we send every Sunday Rockstar CMO on the web, Twitter, and LinkedIn Previous episodes and all the show notes: Rockstar CMO FM. Track List: Piano Music is by Johnny Easton, shared under a Creative Commons license We'll be right back by Stienski & Mass Media on YouTube Listen on Apple, Amazon, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Rockstar CMO FM
The Cathy Does Conferences, and Robert Doesn't do the Obvious Episode

Rockstar CMO FM

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2024 63:40


This week, for her now regular monthly slot, Cathy McKnight pops into the studio to discuss some new research from the Content Marketing Institute about marketing jobs and her experience at MAICON (Marketing AI Conference) and Salesforce's Dreamforce. The key points they discuss: AI is becoming integral to every marketing job. The job market for marketing professionals is increasingly competitive. Remote work preferences are reshaping workplace dynamics. AI literacy is essential for modern marketers. Understanding current processes is crucial for AI implementation. Diversity in conference attendees reflects the broad interest in AI. AI tools should be considered part of a broader strategy, not a standalone discipline. Engagement and community building are key to successful events.   Ian then joins Robert Rose, the Chief Troublemaker at The Content Advisory, in the Rockstar CMO virtual bar and, over a cocktail, shares his view on why the obvious solution is not always the obvious solution.  Enjoy! ---- The people: Ian Truscott on LinkedIn  Cathy McKnight on LinkedIn Robert Rose on LinkedIn and Threads Mentioned in this week's episode: Research from the Content Marketing Institute - How Hard Is It To Find Content or Marketing Jobs (and How Much Should They Pay)?  The Marketing Artificial Intelligence Institute  Robert and Cathy's firm: The Content Advisory The Content Advisory webinars Robert's podcast – This Old Marketing Robert's CMI article series - Rose Colored Glasses Rockstar CMO: Monday Mojo - our monthly LinkedIn Newsletter The Beat Newsletter that we send every Sunday Rockstar CMO on the web, Twitter, and LinkedIn Previous episodes and all the show notes: Rockstar CMO FM. Track List: Piano Music is by Johnny Easton, shared under a Creative Commons license We'll be right back by Stienski & Mass Media on YouTube Listen on Apple, Amazon, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Passages
[SPONSORISÉ] Passages présente : Minuit aux Galeries (Les Galeries Lafayette) - Transmettre avec Pedro Winter

Passages

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2024 28:18


Aujourd'hui, dans Passages, on vous propose de découvrir un épisode de Minuit aux Galeries, un podcast des Galeries Lafayette, produit par Louie Creative.Pedro Winter, considéré comme l'homme à plusieurs casquettes. Il a été DJ sous le pseudo de Busy P, meilleur nom de personne occupée. Peut-être parce qu'au même moment il était manager des Daft Punk. Ou parce que son label, Edbanger, a signé les plus grands noms de la French Touch, de Laurent Garnier à Uffie en passant par Dj Mehdi, Mr Oizo ou Cassius, entre autres.Dans cet épisode, Julien Magalhaes échange avec Pedro Winter le temps d'une balade nocturne dans les Galeries Lafayette. C'est l'opportunité pour le compositeur et producteur de revenir sur ses premières découvertes musicales, sur ses aspirations et aussi d'évoquer son rapport à la mode. “Minuit aux Galeries” est un podcast des Galeries Lafayette, produit par Louie Creative, l'agence de création de contenus de Louie Media, avec CMI. Julien Magalhaes a préparé cet épisode. Jean Thévenin en a fait la prise de son, le montage, la réalisation et le mix, sur des musiques qu'il a composées. Lucile Rousseau-Garcia a supervisé la production. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

On Brand with Nick Westergaard
Connecting Consumer Insights to Brand Strategy

On Brand with Nick Westergaard

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2024 28:12


Richard Davies is the co-founder of Alchemy-Rx. With decades with brands like Unilever, he specializes in connecting changing consumer insights to effective brand strategy. We discussed all of this and more this week on the On Brand podcast. About Richard Davies Richard Davies is a seasoned consumer goods industry veteran with a remarkable career spanning nearly three decades, contributing to over 250 brands across more than 50 categories. He has an extensive background in brand strategy and consumer insights, holding various executive roles at Unilever such as Global Head of CMI, SVP of Corporate Strategy, Head of Innovation, and GM of Asia. As Chief Marketing Officer at Newell Brands, Richard led the company's marketing and development functions, overseeing the creation of over 4,000 new product innovations. Since co-founding Alchemy-Rx in 2018, Richard has specialized in marketing, focusing on founder-led brands, private equity, and public companies. He is an expert in brand strategy, brand building, brand innovation and consumer insights. From the Show What brand has made Richard smile recently? Richard directed us to his ongoing love of the Kinder brand. Connect with Richard on LinkedIn and the Alchemy-Rx website. As We Wrap … Listen and subscribe at  Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon/Audible, Google Play, Stitcher, TuneIn, iHeart, YouTube, and RSS. Rate and review the show—If you like what you're hearing, be sure to head over to Apple Podcasts and click the 5-star button to rate the show. And, if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review to help others find the show. Did you hear something you liked on this episode or another? Do you have a question you'd like our guests to answer? Let me know on Twitter using the hashtag #OnBrandPodcast and you may just hear your thoughts here on the show. On Brand is a part of the Marketing Podcast Network. Until next week, I'll see you on the Internet! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

PNR: This Old Marketing | Content Marketing with Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose
Will OpenAI's Seeds Grow a Strawberry Harvest? (446)

PNR: This Old Marketing | Content Marketing with Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 75:37


OpenAI launches the "Strawberry" version within ChatGPT claiming better reasoning and complex thinking. Joe and Robert take it to the test. TikTok heads back to court with a January 19th ban date looming. Joe predicts what will happen. And Instagram launches a version for teens only. Is it enough? Finally, MrBeast "leaks" his personal YouTube production manual. Is there gold within? Winners and losers include Sun Studio and the 2024 Content Marketing Award winner. Rants and raves include MAICON's headsets and CMI's marketing career study. ----- This week's links: OpenAI's Strawberry Is Scary Good at Deception TikTok Goes to Court Inst Launches Teen Accounts MrBeast's Playbook Uncovered MrBeast: How to Succeed at YouTube Playbook ----- This week's sponsor: Grow better, faster with Hubspot's all-in-one intuitive customer platform - Hubspot.com/ ------- Liked this show? SUBSCRIBE to this podcast on Spotify, Apple, Google and more. Catch past episodes and show notes at ThisOldMarketing.com. Catch and subscribe to our NEW show on YouTube. NOTE: You can get captions there. Subscribe to Joe Pulizzi's Orangeletter and get two free downloads direct from Joe. Subscribe to Robert Rose's newsletter at Experience Advisors.  

Medical Illustration Podcast
Peg Gerrity interview

Medical Illustration Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2024 62:58


Peg Gerrity, MAMS, CMI represents a classic medical illustrator in many ways. Peg has worked for over 30 years as a freelancer, taking on a wide range of projects, many of which were focused on pregnancy and embryonic development. In this episode we talk about Peg's freelance experiences both in US and abroad, her work in traditional and digital media, thoughts on AI and on fundamental business skills. Check out the show notes at: https://www.pkvisualization.com/post/medical-illustration-podcast-peg-gerrity-interview

Be Green With Amy - Plant Based Nutrition, Weight Loss, Cooking, Traveling and more!
Bunions Be Gone: Revolutionary Methods to Heal Bunions Naturally! Eileen Kopsaftis

Be Green With Amy - Plant Based Nutrition, Weight Loss, Cooking, Traveling and more!

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2024 83:39


Do you struggle with painful bunions and want to avoid surgery? Join us as physical therapist & nutrition educator Eileen Kopsaftis reveals natural, effective methods to reverse bunions and restore your foot health. Click here to watch!

Rockstar CMO FM
The Good Budget Housekeeper and Renting Success Episode

Rockstar CMO FM

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2024 64:02


In the Marketing Studio this week, Jeff Clark and Ian Truscott dust down their Five F'in Fundamentals of Good Budget Planning and discuss some fresh research(shared on LinkedIn) from Mike Raimondi of B2B Market Calc.  They discuss: // Benchmark Your Budget vs. Peers // Separate program expenses into Campaigns vs. Shared Services // Find your path to ROI (past and future) // Determine if you have the right budget allocation mode // Identify the best opportunities to experiment, even though the budget is tight. Ian then joins Robert Rose, the Chief Troublemaker at The Content Advisory, in the Rockstar CMO virtual bar to discuss renting success over a cocktail. Enjoy! — The people: // Ian Truscott on LinkedIn  // Jeff Clark on LinkedIn // Robert Rose on LinkedIn and Threads Mentioned in this week's episode: // LinkedIn Post about marketing by budgets by Mike Raimondi  // B2B CMOs Don't Expect 2025 Growth To Come From Budget Increases on the Forrester Blog // Take the Stairs - Book by Rory Vaden // Can You Rent Success by Publishing Beyond the Website? - Robert's article on the CMI blog // Robert's firm: The Content Advisory // Robert's podcast – This Old Marketing Rockstar CMO: // Monday Mojo - our monthly LinkedIn Newsletter // The Beat Newsletter that we send every Sunday // Rockstar CMO on the web, Twitter, and LinkedIn // Previous episodes and all the show notes: Rockstar CMO FM. Track List: // Piano Music is by Johnny Easton, shared under a Creative Commons license // We'll be right back by Stienski & Mass Media on YouTube // Money by Pink Floyd on Spotify Listen on Apple, Amazon, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Creation.com Talk Podcast
How to Debunk a Conspiracy Theory

Creation.com Talk Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2024 28:38


In this interview, CMI's senior scientist, Dr Robert Carter, explains what to do when confronted with people who believe the impossible. ✍️ Links and Show Notes Why CMI rejects conspiracy theorizingA flat earth, and other nonsense Why the Universe does not revolve around the EarthThe flat earth myth How to think (not what to think)

Tan/GenteGT
Cómo amar a España y Guatemala al mismo tiempo: entrevista con Francisco Pérez de Antón - TanGente

Tan/GenteGT

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2024 66:51


Daniel Haering conversa con el escritor, periodista y empresario Francisco Pérez de Antón sobre los libros que estrenará en FILGUA. Además de abordar mucha de la historia de vida de nuestro invitado ¿Por qué viene a Guatemala desde España?, su vida como empresario en la fundación de CMI, el nacimiento, dificultades y la caída de Crónica un medio de comunicación importante en Guatemala. También hablamos sobre el gobierno actual y los retos que tienen actualmente. No te pierdas esta reveladora entrevista que ofrece una visión profunda tanto de la vida personal de Francisco Pérez de Antón como de su perspectiva crítica sobre los acontecimientos políticos y sociales de Guatemala. ¡Suscríbete y activa las notificaciones para más contenido exclusivo como este!

The Seth Leibsohn Show
June 27, 2024 - Hour 2

The Seth Leibsohn Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2024 37:26


Seth broadcasts live from the Travek Inc. showroom in Scottsdale, and is joined by former Mayor of Tempe Hugh Hallman for the full hour.  Shelli Boggs, candidate for Maricopa County Superintendent, joins Seth to talk about her campaign.  For more information, visit https://boggsforschools.com.  Johnny Estes, Vice President of Operations at CMI Gold and Silver, on what makes CMI special.  Gina Swoboda, Chairwoman of the Arizona Republican Party, joins Seth to talk about the 2024 election.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Life Changing Questions Podcast
224: How To Master Content Marketing With Joe Pulizzi & Kevin Bees, Profit Maximisation Expert

Life Changing Questions Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2024 33:06


Joe Pulizzi (he/him) is founder of multiple startups including content creator education site, The Tilt,  Content Entrepreneur Expo (CEX), and is the bestselling author of seven books including Content Inc. and Epic Content Marketing, which was named a “Must-Read Business Book” by Fortune Magazine.   Joe is best known for his work in content marketing, first using the term in 2001, then launching Content Marketing Institute and the Content Marketing World event. In 2014, he received the "Lifetime Achievement Award" by the Content Council. He successfully exited CMI in 2016 and consequently wrote an award-winning mystery novel, The Will to Die.   He has two weekly podcasts, the motivational Content Inc. podcast and the award-winning content news and analysis show This Old Marketing with Robert Rose. His foundation, The Orange Effect, delivers speech therapy and technology services to over 350 children in 37 states. Joe and his family live in Cleveland, Ohio.     Joe Pulizzi shared in this episode: His foundation, The Orange Effect, delivers speech therapy and technology services to over 350 children in 37 states. How to build an audience and drive revenue through content marketing. How he transformed from feeling like a failure in business, to having the realisation that he would not have to work for anyone again, ever. How to make powerful decisions, by being in alignment with the answers to these questions:  “What do I want, why am I doing it?” How to create a content business Why success is about building long term relationships with your prospects and customers What is keeping your customers up at night that you can help that is not your product? It is NOT about what you want to sell.  That is about YOU. Content marketing is about reliving value over a long period of time Say no to as much as you can so you can say YES to the things that will make the difference His Life-changing question: How can I deliver more value today than I take? And much more…    Resources Mentioned In The Show: www.cex.events joepulizzi.com/about Steven Covey Think and grow rich 10x Grant Cordone Ep122 Myia Cleggett https://profithive.com.au/myia-cleggett-kevin-bees/   If you would like more insights on profit maximization for your business, visit www.ProfitHive.com.au  

Dare to Disrupt
Building the Content Marketing Community with Joe Pulizzi

Dare to Disrupt

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2024 56:20


Joe Pulizzi is the founder of multiple startups, including content creator education site, The Tilt, Content Entrepreneur Expo, and the Content Marketing Institute, which he successfully exited in 2016. He is the bestselling author of seven books including Content Inc. and Epic Content Marketing, which was named a “Must-Read Business Book” by Fortune Magazine. Joe is a professional public speaker, having spoken over 400 times in 20 plus countries on content marketing, the creator economy, and entrepreneurship. He graduated from Bowling Green State University with a bachelor's in communications in 1995, and from Penn State with a master's in communications in 1997.   In this episode, Joe shares his experience building the Content Marketing Institute, the failures he endured along the way, his strong commitment to goal-setting, and his association with the color orange. He also talks about jumping into writing a thriller novel to challenge himself creatively. Joe also shares his insights around the difference between content creators and content entrepreneurs, and why he believes it's an important distinction.  At the end of the episode, current Penn State student Riley Auer joins the conversation. Riley is the founder of Bootleg Boomerangs, which sells high-quality hand-made wooden boomerangs. Bootleg Boomerangs has a large focus on content creation, with over 31,000 subscribers on YouTube. Riley talks through some challenges he faces in growing his business with Joe, who gives advice regarding ad placement in video content, finding the true super fans through exclusive giveaways and experiences, and striking the balance between being a business and being a place for fun content. Episode Chapters 0:00 – 3:49 Intro and journey summary   3:49 – 4:43 Growing up next to Cedar Point Amusement Park  4:43 – 6:42 Undergrad at Bowling Green – Do I have to declare a major? 6:42 – 9:32 Graduate student at Penn State, teaching speech class  9:32 – 12:12 Struggling on the job search  12:12 – 15:16 The evolving business model of content marketing  15:16– 19:30 The inception of Content Marketing Institute  19:30 – 22:11 The moment he realized he had made it  22:11 – 24:34 What's the deal with Joe's orange self-branding?  24:34 – 28:36  Setting goals and exiting CMI  28:36 – 30:41 Taking a sabbatical  30:41 – 31:59 Becoming a thriller author  31:59 – 33:45 Launching the Tilt and Content Entrepreneur Expo  33:45 –  35:54 The difference between Content Creator vs. Content Entrepreneur  35:54 – 37:50 Defining the Tilt's audience  37:50 – 38:32 How to get connected to Joe  38:32 – 40:01 The Orange Effect Foundation, providing access to speech and play therapy for autistic children  40:01 – 55:51 Student Questions – Joe gives actionable advice to Riley Auer, Bootleg Boomerangs founder 

Cutting the Curd
Cheese Culture Coalition Scholarships! A Guide to What's Available Right Now

Cutting the Curd

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2024 52:05


We check in with Agela Abdullah, Kyra James and Nicole Garrett of the Cheese Culture Coalition about the CCC's growth as a non profit, and as a national community since they were on CTC in 2021. One indicator of their success is the sizable grant and scholarship program available for BIPOC cheese professionals to further their cheese education and professional development. Deadline to apply for grants and the CMI scholarship is May 10th! Listen here for all of the details.Heritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support Cutting the Curd by becoming a member!Cutting the Curd is Powered by Simplecast.

School of Podcasting
Crafting Engaging Content: Insights from Joe Pulizzi

School of Podcasting

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2024 48:41


I am so excited to have Joe Pulizzi on the show today. Joe has been creating great podcasts like Content Inc., and This Old Marketing show for years to coincide with his amazing books like Content Inc., Epic Content and  The Content Entrepreneur.  Joe also created and sold the Content Marketing Institute and is now the man behind the Content Entrepreneur Expo (May 5-7, 2024, in Cleveland, Ohio). Use the coupon JP100 to save $100. In 2014, he received the "Lifetime Achievement Award" by the Content Council. He successfully exited CMI in 2016 and wrote an award-winning mystery novel, The Will to Die. In other words people, Joe is a "Big Shot Smarty Pants" (the highest level of coolness here at the SOP). Get your pencils ready. Join the School of Podcasting Community Risk-Free Are you looking to start your own podcast but don't know where to begin? Look no further than the School of Podcasting. Our comprehensive online courses and one-on-one coaching will teach you everything you need to know, from equipment and editing to marketing and monetization. With our proven methods and unlimited one-on-one consulting, you'll be creating high-quality, engaging content in no time. Say goodbye to the frustration and uncertainty and hello to a successful podcasting career with the School of Podcasting. Use the coupon code schoolofpodcasting.com/listener to save on a monthly or yearly subscription.   Mentioned In This Episode Join the School of Podcasting Community Joe's books: Content Inc., Epic Content and  The Content Entrepreneur.  Joe's Podcasts: Content Inc., and This Old Marketing Joe's Website: https://www.joepulizzi.com/ Joe's Newsletters: The Tilt, and the Orangeletter. Content Entrepreneur Expo (Coupon JP100) Book Launch Secrets Course Profit From Your Podcast Book Where Will Dave Be? Question of the Month Power of Podcasting Network Dave's YouTube Channel Dave's Podcasting Newsletter Buy Dave a Coffee Put Dave In Your Pocket   Podcasting 2.0 Chapters 00:00:01 - Why Joe is Here? 00:00:24 - Opening  00:01:23 - Joe Pullizzi Interview 00:01:48 - Joe is a Good Guy 00:02:34 - The Tilt Newsletter (https://www.thetilt.com/) 00:04:19 - What is Content Marketing? 00:06:02 - Where to Start When There is No Audience? 00:08:32 - Davus Interruptus How to Sell in a Balanced Way 00:11:37 - Joe Knows What I Want 00:12:16 - Tracking Marketing Success? 00:14:32 - The Orange Newsletter (https://www.joepulizzi.com/signup/ ) 00:17:16 - You Don't Need to Be Everywhere 00:20:50 - What is Engaging Content? 00:24:59 - How Long Does it Take to Build An Audience? 00:27:42 - Lessons Learned From Mistakes 00:29:22 - Join the School of Podcasting Worry Free  00:30:23 - Podcasting Checklist (https://www.schoolofpodcasting.com/checklist) 00:30:37 - What Joe Would Do Differently? 00:33:47 - Content Entrepreneur Expo (https://cex.events) 00:35:40 - Do These Tips Apply For Entertainment Shows?  00:40:39 - Networking At CEX  00:41:50 - CEX.EVENTS COUPON JP100  00:43:22 - Don't Just Take Notes  00:44:34 - My Takeaways  00:46:19 - Question of the Month (https://www.schoolofpodcasting.com/question ) 00:47:20 - Profit From Your Podcast (https://www.profitfromyourpodcast.com/book ) 00:47:53 - Book Launch Secrets (https://www.schoolofpodcasting.com/booklaunchsecrets ) 00:48:32 - Can You Share the Show?  00:49:49 - Bloopers - Polishing Content  

Dev Game Club
DGC Ep 381: The Last Express (part one)

Dev Game Club

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2024 82:02


Welcome to Dev Game Club, where this week we continue our series on rotoscoped games by hopping aboard The Last Express, the graphic adventure from Jordan Mechner and Smoking Car Productions of 1997 via publisher Broderbund. Dev Game Club looks at classic video games and plays through them over several episodes, providing commentary. Sections played: To Vienna (Tim) and past Epernay (Brett) Issues covered: our history with the game, playing the game on the iPad, the adventure game at the time, budget and sales, some history of the game, the edutainment industry, critical response, how many discs, cost of goods, the history of Epernay, generic settings vs the highly specific dates in the game, the overwhelm, jumping onto a moving train, photo research, pulling the brake, what to do with a dead body, trial and error, the various ways things can play out from just the first puzzle, rain in Europe in 1914, a digression into multiple speed CD-ROMs, getting into rotoscoping, a 3D modeled train with rotoscoped characters on top, chasing after a character in the hall, walk-boxes with Z values, the screen door effect, a linear game in space vs an open-ended game in time, synchronicity, the sense of a train trip, prioritizing animation vs input, mechanics-forward vs simulation-forward, what players care about and what they see. Games, people, and influences mentioned or discussed: Jordan Mechner, Broderbund, GoldenEye 007, Diablo, Castlevania: Symphony of the Night, Fallout, Curse of Monkey Island, Riven, MYST, Jonathan Ackley, Larry Ahern, Quake, SW: Jedi Knight: DF2, Outlaws, LucasArts, Turok, Shadow Warrior, Hexen II, Duke Nuke'em, Postal, Age of Empires, Final Fantasy VII, Wing Commander: Prophecy, Xwing vs TIE Fighter, Colony Wars, Interstate '76, Mario Kart 64, Diddy Kong Racing, Grand Theft Auto, Gran Turismo, OddWorld, Sam and Max Hit the Road, Bethesda Game Studios, Bill Tiller, Day of the Tentacle, Sierra, Phantasmagoria, Gabriel Knight: Sins of the Father, Zoetrope Studios, Francis Ford Coppola, Smoking Car Productions, Tomi Pierce, Doug Carlston, Chris Remo, The Learning Company, Another World, Prince of Persia, Baldur's Gate, Final Fantasy VII, PlayStation, Sony, Daron Stinnett, Scream (series), Grim Fandango, Quadrilateral Cowboy, Blendo Games, Thirty Flights of Loving, Agatha Christie, Murder on the Orient Express, Paul Verhoeven, RoboCop, Basic Instinct, Starship Troopers, Elle, Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Skyrim, Ron Gilbert, Waking Life, A Scanner Darkly, Deadline, Infocom, Zork, Ben Sarason, Arkham Asylum, Red Dead Redemption (series), RockStar, Tomb Raider (series), Brandon Fernandez, Core Design, Mario (series), Uncharted (series), Kirk Hamilton, Aaron Evers, Mark Garcia.  Next time: Finish the game (?)/ Explore further Errata and Extra: The lead animator on CMI was Mark Overney (!), and it was my mistake, I was thinking it had been Charlie Ramos Blendo Games is Brendon Chung Paul Verhoeven is Dutch, and he did direct Basic Instinct Links: The Last Express: Revisiting An Unsung Classic Twitch: brettdouville or timlongojr, instagram:timlongojr, Twitter: @devgameclub Discord DevGameClub@gmail.com

Late Confirmation by CoinDesk
MARKETS DAILY: CoinDesk Market Index Week in Review

Late Confirmation by CoinDesk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2024 4:51


CoinDesk Indices presents six notable market movement highlights from last week.To get the show every day, follow the podcast here.The CoinDesk Market Index (CMI) functions as a benchmark for the performance of the digital asset market, delivering institutional quality information to digital asset investors. Today's takeaways are provided by Tracy Stephens, senior index manager of CoinDesk Indices with additional analysis from Miguel Kudry, CEO of L1 Advisors. For more on the CMI you can visit: coindeskmarkets.com.This episode was hosted by Noelle Acheson. “Markets Daily” is executive produced by Jared Schwartz and produced and edited by Eleanor Pahl. All original music by Doc Blust and Colin Mealey.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Late Confirmation by CoinDesk
MARKETS DAILY: CoinDesk Market Index Week in Review

Late Confirmation by CoinDesk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2024 4:22


CoinDesk Indices presents six notable market movement highlights from last week.To get the show every day, follow the podcast here.The CoinDesk Market Index (CMI) functions as a benchmark for the performance of the digital asset market, delivering institutional quality information to digital asset investors. Today's takeaways are provided by Tracy Stephens, senior index manager of CoinDesk Indices with additional analysis from Connor Farley, CEO and cofounder of Truvius. For more on the CMI you can visit: coindeskmarkets.com.This episode was hosted by Noelle Acheson. “Markets Daily” is executive produced by Jared Schwartz and produced and edited by Eleanor Pahl. All original music by Doc Blust and Colin Mealey.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Late Confirmation by CoinDesk
MARKETS DAILY: CoinDesk Market Index Week in Review

Late Confirmation by CoinDesk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2023 6:21


CoinDesk Indices presents six notable market movement highlights from last week.Today's episode is sponsored by CME Group.To get the show every day, follow the podcast here.The CoinDesk Market Index (CMI) functions as a benchmark for the performance of the digital asset market, delivering institutional quality information to digital asset investors. Today's takeaways are provided by Pallavi Chintam, quantitative analyst at CoinDesk Indices with additional analysis from David Attermann, co-founder and managing partner of Omnichain Capital. For more on the CMI you can visit: coindeskmarkets.com.-From our sponsors:CME Group Cryptocurrency futures and options provide market-leading liquidity for bitcoin and ether trading. These cash-settled contracts give full exposure to crypto performance without the hassle of holding the physical position. No digital wallet? No problem. Trade nearly 24/7 in a transparent, CFTC-regulated market. Visit cmegroup.com/crypto to learn more.Disclaimer:This communication is not directed to investors located in any particular jurisdiction and is not intended to be accessed by recipients based in jurisdictions in which distribution is not permitted. The information herein should not be considered investment advice or the results of actual market experience. Past results are not necessarily indicative of future performance. Trading derivatives products involves the risk of loss. Please consider carefully whether futures or options are appropriate to your financial situation.-This episode was hosted by Noelle Acheson. “Markets Daily” is executive produced by Jared Schwartz and produced and edited by Eleanor Pahl. All original music by Doc Blust and Colin Mealey.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Late Confirmation by CoinDesk
MARKETS DAILY: CoinDesk Market Index Week in Review

Late Confirmation by CoinDesk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2023 5:49


CoinDesk Indices presents six notable market movement highlights from last week.Today's episode is sponsored by CME Group.To get the show every day, follow the podcast here.The CoinDesk Market Index (CMI) functions as a benchmark for the performance of the digital asset market, delivering institutional quality information to digital asset investors. Today's takeaways are provided by Tracy Stephens, senior index manager of CoinDesk Indices with additional analysis from Connor Farley, CEO and cofounder of Truvius. For more on the CMI you can visit: coindeskmarkets.com.-From our sponsors:CME Group Cryptocurrency futures and options provide market-leading liquidity for bitcoin and ether trading. These cash-settled contracts give full exposure to crypto performance without the hassle of holding the physical position. No digital wallet? No problem. Trade nearly 24/7 in a transparent, CFTC-regulated market. Visit cmegroup.com/crypto to learn more.Disclaimer:This communication is not directed to investors located in any particular jurisdiction and is not intended to be accessed by recipients based in jurisdictions in which distribution is not permitted. The information herein should not be considered investment advice or the results of actual market experience. Past results are not necessarily indicative of future performance. Trading derivatives products involves the risk of loss. Please consider carefully whether futures or options are appropriate to your financial situation.-This episode was hosted by Noelle Acheson. “Markets Daily” is executive produced by Jared Schwartz and produced and edited by Eleanor Pahl. All original music by Doc Blust and Colin Mealey.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.