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Best podcasts about cnl

Latest podcast episodes about cnl

The Neoliberal Podcast
Did the Internet cause global populism? A live recording with Francis Fukuyama

The Neoliberal Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2025 37:10


Today's episode comes from a live event CNL held with Francis Fukuyama during our New Liberal Action Summit in Washington DC. Frank and I discuss whether or not the internet is to blame for the global rise of populism, how worried we should be about right wing control of the media, and what role young liberals have to play in solving these problems. Check out Frank's podcast, Frankly Fukuyama, over at Persuasion - https://www.persuasion.community/s/frankly-fukuyama To get bonus episodes, support us at patreon.com/newliberalpodcast or https://cnliberalism.org/become-a-member Got questions? Send us a note at mailbag@cnliberalism.org. Follow us at: https://twitter.com/CNLiberalism https://cnliberalism.org/ Join a local chapter

ThinkEnergy
Growing power: connecting energy and agriculture with Dr. Rupp Carriveau

ThinkEnergy

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2025 48:46


Trevor reconnects with his former professor, Dr. Rupp Carriveau from the University of Windsor, to explore how Southern Ontario's agriculture and energy sectors intersect. From powering greenhouses and managing massive industrial demand to reimagining aging wind farms and testing “atomic agriculture,” together they unpack how innovation, AI, and new tech are reshaping Canada's clean energy future. Listen to episode 164 of thinkenery.    Related links Dr. Rupp Carriveau on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rupp-carriveau-b4273823/ Environmental Energy Institute: https://www.environmentalenergyinstitute.com/ Turbulence and Energy Lab: http://www.turbulenceandenergylab.org/ Offshore Energy and Storage Society: https://www.osessociety.com/    Trevor Freeman on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/trevor-freeman-p-eng-8b612114    Hydro Ottawa: https://hydroottawa.com/en      To subscribe using Apple Podcasts:  https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/thinkenergy/id1465129405   To subscribe using Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7wFz7rdR8Gq3f2WOafjxpl   To subscribe on Libsyn: http://thinkenergy.libsyn.com/ --- Subscribe so you don't miss a video: https://www.youtube.com/user/hydroottawalimited   Follow along on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hydroottawa   Stay in the know on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HydroOttawa   Keep up with the posts on X: https://twitter.com/thinkenergypod --- Transcript: Trevor Freeman  00:07 Welcome to thinkenergy, a podcast that dives into the fast, changing world of energy through conversations with industry leaders, innovators and people on the front lines of the energy transition. Join me, Trevor Freeman, as I explore the traditional, unconventional and up and coming facets of the energy industry. If you have any thoughts, feedback or ideas for topics we should cover, please reach out to us at think energy at hydro ottawa.com, hi everyone, and welcome back. Today's episode brings us back to a few elements of my own personal history. Now you'll have to bear with me for a minute or two while I dive into my past in order to properly set up today's conversation, I grew up in southwestern Ontario, in and just outside the border town of Windsor, Ontario. Now for those of you not familiar with this area, Windsor and its surroundings are the most southern part of Canada. It might surprise you to know that Windsor is at the same latitude as Northern California and Rome, Italy. You can imagine that after growing up in Windsor and then living in various places around the globe, when I finally settled down here in Ottawa, adjusting to the more stereotypical Canadian winters of this northern capital, took a little bit of getting used to Windsor is so far south when you cross the border to its neighboring American city, Detroit, Michigan, you actually travel north. Have a look at a map if this seems to defy logic, but I promise you, it's true. This is the area that I grew up in. It's also where I went to school and got my engineering degree. More on that in a minute. Now, if you've ever driven down to the southwestern end of the 401 going past London and Chatham, you will notice two things. First, it is flat, very flat. You will not see a meaningful Hill anywhere in sight. I often joke with people that I used to toboggan when we did get any meaningful snow off of highway overpasses, because that was the only hill we could find. I was only partly joking, and I have indeed tobogganed off of said overpasses in my young and foolish days. But that is a story for another time. That brings us to the second thing you'll see, which is wind turbines. A lot of wind turbines. They are seemingly everywhere, stretching as far as you can see, southwestern Ontario is a hotbed of wind energy generation. Finally, a hint at why I'm going on about this part of the province on an energy podcast. But before we get into it, there's one other thing to touch on, and that is the fact that this area is also home to a large number of greenhouses growing produce year-round, as well as manufacturing. Windsor and its surrounding area is the automotive capital of Canada, with a number of plants from major car companies, as well as a supporting ecosystem of parts manufacturers. Incidentally, that's where I started my career, working as an environmental engineer for one of the automakers, and many members of my family have also worked or still work in that industry. The reason I bring up greenhouses in the auto industry is because they have some very high energy demand profiles, and that is how we get for me going on nostalgically about the area I grew up in, to our conversation today, I recently caught up with one of my engineering professors, Dr Rupp Carriveau, about the work that he and his colleagues have been doing that ties all of this together. And I thought it would be great to have him on the show to talk about that. Dr. Carriveau is the director of the Environmental Energy Institute and co-director of the Turbulence and Energy Lab and the CO lead of AGUwin at the University of Windsor. Back in the day, he was my fluid dynamics professor. But today, he balances his teaching duties with research into energy systems futures and advanced agricultural systems. He is a founder of the offshore energy and storage society, a recipient of the University Scholar Award, and has been named to Canada's clean 50 for his contributions to clean capitalism. Dr Rupp Carriveau, welcome to the show.   Dr Rupp Carriveau  03:59 Trevor, great to be here. Thanks.   Trevor Freeman  04:01 Yeah. So, Rupp, the last time we chatted, well, so you and I chatted a couple weeks ago, but before that, the last time that you and I interacted, I was in third year university. You were my fluid dynamics Prof. So, in addition to your professorial duties, you're now the director of the environmental Energy Institute at the University of Windsor. So, there's two questions around that. First off, how did you end up going from my fluid dynamics prof a number of years ago, probably close to 20 years ago now, to running this institute? And tell us a little bit about what the Institute does.   Dr Rupp Carriveau  04:40 Sure. Though. So, thanks. Yeah, and very memorable Trevor, because I, you know, I remember you well. And, yeah, that was, that was a very nice class that we had. I remember, well, I remember your colleagues too.   Trevor Freeman  04:54 If there's one thing I do, well, it's, it's be memorable, and you can take that however you want.   Dr Rupp Carriveau  04:58 That is, that is. Something to be said for that. Yeah, thanks for that question. So I should point out that in addition to EEI, I am a co-director in the Turbulence and Energy Lab, which is really where all of the EEI initiatives have started from, that's a lab that I co supervise with Dr David Ting in mechanical engineering and the nuts and bolts, the very serious engineering side of things, comes out of the Turbulence and Energy Lab. EEI kind of came about to handle topics that were, frankly speaking, less interesting to Dr Ting. So, things that push more, a little bit more into policy wider systems looks at things as opposed to, you know, pure thermodynamics and energy efficiency type pursuits, which underpin a lot of the EEI policy pieces, but are sort of beyond the scope of what turbulence and energy lab does. So those two things, and then more recently, actually, I'm co lead on, AGUwin, which is like a center of excellence, emerging Center of Excellence at the University of Windsor. So, Agriculture U Windsor is a group of about 40 professors that do work in agriculture in some shape or form. And we've, we've, we've taken to organizing that movement in seeking sort of group funding proposals, developing curriculum and organized sort of platforms to help industry in agriculture. And it's, it's really taking off, which I'm really excited about my extremely hard-working colleagues and CO lead, Isabel Barrett-Ng, she in particular, has been really driving a lot of really cool initiatives ahead and all the people that work with us. So, yeah, lots, lots happening at the University since I saw you last. But you know, time has a way of helping with that, people find ways to find efficiencies and get to do and build on, build on, hopefully incremental progress.   Trevor Freeman  07:08 Yeah, very cool. And you're teasing a few of the areas our conversation is going to go today, that sort of intersection between agriculture and obviously, this is an energy podcast, and so how does agriculture and the way we're moving in with agriculture impacts energy and vice versa. So, we're definitely going to get to that in a minute, I think, for our listeners that are not familiar with Southern Ontario, and I haven't talked about Southern Ontario on the podcast a lot, but people that know me know I will gladly talk about what goes on in the very southern part of our country. It's where I grew up. Help us paint a picture of what Southern Ontario is like. So, in the context of energy, what makes this area of Ontario unique?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  07:50 Well, it's that's a really good question, and I'm glad you phrased it that way, because I think it gets taken for granted. And also, folks, folks don't know energy isn't in the headlines every day, and if it is, it's not a headline that everybody pays attention to. But the southwestern Ontario region, if you take the 401 west of London, you'll start to see a high concentration of wind. So, there's a significant wind corridor in the region, and that's because it's very flat, so the whole area used to be a lake bed, and so we have very fertile agricultural lands as a result of that. And we also have very few obstacles to fetch, which is a huge aspect of how wind carries over the lakes, and is, you know, not, not obstructed. And so it's like you have offshore resources onshore, which is completely ideal. Also, we have, as it may be, we have massive natural gas resources in the area, in sort of the subterranean space of Devonian reefs for natural gas storage. We have natural gas generation facilities down around the Windsor area that help with provincial peaking and there is some solar in the region, because it is the Leamington Kingsville area is referred to as the sun parlor of Ontario. And as a result, we have a lot of under glass agriculture there, which benefits, obviously, directly from solar resources. And then we have solar photovoltaic that takes advantage of that sun as well. So there's, there's a lot happening here energy wise.   Trevor Freeman  09:38 Yeah, and there's a lot on the demand side of things as well. So, you mentioned the greenhouses, which are an up and coming, you know, source of demand draws on our grid. There's also a big manufacturing base. Talk a little bit about the manufacturing base in the area. Yeah, yeah. And that's that gets into my next question is talking about some of the specific, unique energy needs of greenhouses. I think on the manufacturing side, you know, you mentioned the auto industry and the parts industry that supports it, you're seeing more. There's a battery plant being built now I think that, I think people have a sense of that, but greenhouses are this thing that I think a lot of folks don't think about. So, you talked about the magnitude of the load, the lighting side of things. What else is this like, a 24/7 load? Is this sector growing like? Tell us a little bit about, you know where things are going with greenhouses?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  09:53 Yeah, thanks. So, yeah, I was, I was thinking about generation and, yeah, demand is. Significant we have. You know, Windsor has laid claim to Canada's automotive capital, and while I'm biased, I'd like to think it still is. And so we have significant manufacturing around the automotive industry, either automotive OEMs or tier one parts makers that have significant draws. We have Stellantis. Every minivan comes out of this area has come out of this area. The electric Dodge Charger comes out of this area. But there are engine plants for Ford, but they're also now, you know, sort of next generation transport technologies. You've talking about battery manufacturing. So, there's an enormous LG consortium with Stellantis here that's doing battery manufacturing. And so, these are huge loads that that add to existing and growing loads in the greenhouse space, which, again, I'll just mention it now, is something that isn't well understood. And we did a, we did a study for the province a couple years, three, four years ago. Now, I think grid Innovation Fund project that looked at sort of really getting into granular detailing of the loads that come with a lit greenhouse. A lot of people don't appreciate that a lit greenhouse, when switched on, depending on the lighting technology, depending on how it's used, can be like a 50-megawatt load, which is a significant load. And just imagine that's one so they can come on quickly, and they are non-trivial, significant loads. And so, this is something that we looked at trying to develop distributed energy resource sort of solutions for, because, simply speaking, you can't put up a new transmission line overnight, and we don't want to economically constrain the growth of the sector. Sure, yeah. I mean, it's, it's not a simple thing to characterize, because what you can take away from this is that these greenhouse developers are business dynamos, and frankly speaking, many of them do very well, because they're very good at what they do, and with the resources they have, they can largely do what they want. And if, if the infrastructure isn't there, they will build it so. So, you'll have folks that are operating off the grid, essentially not off the gas grid, of course, but they're using gas for cogeneration purposes, to produce heat for their crops, but also the electricity for their lights. So that is one aspect of it that further complicates how to figure out what these loads on the grid will be. But for the most part, of course, the grid provides quite clean and quite affordable electricity in the province, and you know where they can they want to be able to connect to the grid. Now, lights are designed to extend the growing day and extend the growing season as well. So, in terms of when they're switched on and how they're switched on, that is highly variable, and that is also something that is, I would say, in development, folks are looking at different ways to use intermittent lighting to be conscious of when peaking happens. It is dispatchable in a way, in that some growers are able to turn their lights off to avoid, you know, peaking charges. But again, there's a lot to manage. And, and it's, it's very complicated, both on the grid side and, and for the greenhouse grower.   Trevor Freeman  14:38 Yeah, so you mentioned natural gas for cogen for heating as well. So, as we look to decarbonize all different aspects of the sector, we talk often on the show of what are the specific areas where decarbonization might be challenging. Is, is greenhouses one of those areas? And, and what are the options available for heating these spaces? Like, is it realistic to think that there's an electric solution here, or what? What's happening in that sector related to decarbonization?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  15:10 Again, you've hit on a real sort of hot button issue for the for the sector, the trouble with natural gas is that it's spectacular. Oh, it's storable. It's dispatchable. It's a triple threat for greenhouses in the best way possible, because you can make your heat, you can make your electricity, and the plants crave CO2, and that comes out of the flue gas on the other side of the combustion reaction. So, you know, when you swing in there and you say, Oh, I've got this great new solution. It's called hydrogen. We'll burn hydrogen and we won't have these nasty CO2 release. And they're like, Okay, who's going to replace my CO2? So, it's a difficult fuel to displace. Now, admittedly, people understand that, you know, that's where we really need to go. And is, is electric? You know, electrification the path. So, people talk about, people talk about heat pumps, people talk about electric boilers. And then, as I mentioned, people talked about, you know, we've, we've also looked at the idea of blending hydrogen into a natural gas feed for existing infrastructure to, you know, because, because not all of the CO2, that is, you know, released is, is taken down by the plants. And so could you get to a magic blend where it's just the amount of CO2 that you need is what goes into the other side, and then there's nothing left after the plants take what they need. So, there's a lot of things that are being looked at. It is again, a challenging space to operate in, because it's highly competitive. Getting really granular. Data is very sensitive, because this, this, this is a, you know, it's a game of margins, and it's in its high stakes production. So to get in there and sort of be in the way is, is difficult. So, this work is being done. We're participating in a lot of this work. We just finished a study for the province, a Hydrogen Innovation Fund study on looking at the integration of hydrogen into the greenhouse space. And it was, it was pretty revelatory for us.   Trevor Freeman  17:36 So is the exhaust from burning natural gas on site. Does that get recycled through the greenhouse and therefore captured to some degree? Do we know how much you kind of hinted at finding out that sweet spot? Do we know how much of that gets captured?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  17:53 Yeah, so the short answer is yes. So, they have the cogen engines have scrubbers on them, and these, these machines are spectacularly capable of being tuned the combustion and the professionals that operate them at the greenhouse facilities are artists, and that they can get the sort of combustion profile a certain way, and so that that flue gas will go into the greenhouse, but to know exactly how much is being taken down, that is an area of active research, and we don't, we don't know that answer yet. There are people that are looking at it, and you can imagine it's kind of a provocative number for the sector. So, they're being very careful about how they do it.   Trevor Freeman  18:36  I'm sure, I'm sure. Okay, let's, let's park that just for a minute here, and jump back to something you mentioned earlier. You talked about one how flat Southern Ontario is, and it took me leaving, leaving the county before I really knew what skiing and tobogganing and everything else was. So, there's a lot of wind power generation. And for anyone listening, yeah, as rip mentioned, if you ever drive down the 401 going towards Windsor, you'll just start to see these massive wind turbines kind of everywhere you look. So, help us understand how these turbines, you know, you look out over a field and you see, you know, 2030, of them more in your line of sight. How do they connect to our provincial grid? How do the contracts work? Like, who gets that power? Give us a little bit of a sense of how that works.   Dr Rupp Carriveau  19:28 For sure. Yeah, well, so what most people don't realize, and again, it's not something that's talked about, and if it is, I don't know people are necessarily paying attention to it, but, but you know the comment I'll get from relatives we talked about Thanksgiving. So, you know people, because they know I'm a wind person, they'll be like, 'Hey, I was driving down the road and I saw they weren't spinning with, what's going on? Are they broken or what?' Well, you know, because we, we've got some pro wind and some non pro wind folks in the in the family, so it's an exciting time for me. But you know, and I mentioned that the greenhouses I'm working with are often starved for utility supply. And they said, well, how can that be? The turbines are right there. They're sharing the same space, right? And most people don't realize that. Really, I would say 95% of the wind in our corridor is put on a transmission line and sent up to, effectively, to Toronto, to be distributed throughout the province, which is great, but it's not really a local asset. And that was sort of what inspired us when we saw these two sorts of juxtaposed. We thought maybe you could turn these assets into something that acted as really a new type of distributed energy resource, and that you've got a transmission connected asset that's currently under contract, but if that contract could be modified, then the fiscal connections could potentially be modified so you could have local distribution, let's say at a time of maybe at a time of transmission curtailment, maybe under different conditions. So again, looking into the physical plausibility of it was part of our study, and then doing some sort of economic investigation of how that would work, having a nearly 20-year-old asset all of a sudden springing into a new role in a new life, where it continues to perform transmission duties for the province at large, but it also serves local needs in the production, let's say, of hydrogen through an electrolyzer, or just plain electrons turning lights on. That is something that isn't possible yet. Regulatory reasons exist for that that would require some, some significant changes. But it was a really interesting exercise to go through to investigate how that could happen.   Trevor Freeman  22:08 Yeah, so there's just trying to understand how this work. There's someone who owns these turbines. Some conglomerate somewhere, you know, Canadian, not Canadian, who knows. They contract with the Independent Electricity System Operator who operates the grid in the province. And they basically say, yeah, well, look, we'll provide you with X amount of power on some contract, and when ISO needs it, they call on it. How long do those contracts last? Is that a 10-year contract? A 20-year contract?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  22:35 So, they are in Ontario. The ones that I'm familiar with for 20 years. So it's possible there are others. I know. I have a there's a farm that operates in PEI that has a nice 30 year PPA. So the longer you can get, the better. Yeah, and these, these power purchase agreements are, are wonderful for developers, because they're known entities, doing the math on your finances is really straightforward with these contracts. And frankly speaking, when you had a sector that needed to be brought up from nothing, they were very necessary. They were very necessary. And but those contracts, and they're and they're locked down, as much as we try to, you know, persuade the province to get crazy, to amuse us with these new, newfangled ways of of connecting to people, commerce wise, through energy, they are not interested so far, at least in and they're like, let's finish these out, and then we can talk your crazy ideas, you know, and so, but that's we're getting glare, because I would say many, many, many farms in the province will be coming up on the sun setting end of Their power purchase agreements in the coming five, six years.   Trevor Freeman  24:03 Yeah, yeah. Which brings me to my next point, of the assets themselves, the actual physical turbine, I assume last longer than 20 years. You're going to build one of these things. You know, 20 years is not its end of life. So what are the options available today? You talked about regulatory barriers. We talk about regulatory barriers on this show often, what are, what are the options today for a wind farm that is at its end of contract? Does it look at re contracting? Can it kind of direct source to someone else? Like, what are the options available for an owner?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  24:40 Yeah, well, to me, it's an exciting time, because it could be work for us. We get excited about this. I think it could be a source of anxiety for owners, because there's nothing better than that long term contract. So many of them will try to apply for things like a medium, a new medium term length contract from the. Province, like an MT two, I think they're called. There are other contract types that are possible, but there'll be, it'll be a highly competitive landscape for those, and the in the province won't be able to give everyone one of these contracts. So some of these, some of these operators, will likely have to look at other options which may be going into the spot market, potentially, you know, getting into the capacity game by getting a battery on site and firming up their ability to provide power when necessary or provide capacity. And then there's a there isn't a relatively recent regulatory development in the around the middle of July, the province said, you know, if you're a non emitting generator and you're not under contract, you could provide virtual power someone else who might need it, if they're looking if they're a class, a customer that's trying to avoid peak charges. You know, rather than that class a customer buys a battery behind the meter and physically reduce their peaks. They could potentially virtually reduce their peaks by setting up a virtual power purchase agreement with another supplier. So these, these off contract spinning assets could have an opportunity to get into this game of peak relief. Which, which could be very lucrative. Because, based on last year's provincial global adjustment charges at large, you're looking at being paid something on the order of about $72,000 a megawatt hour for the, for the for the for the megawatt hours in question, which, which, of course, you know, try to get as many as you can. .   Trevor Freeman  26:31 Yeah. So there's a couple of things there. Bear with me while I connect a few dots for our listeners. So on different shows, we talk about different things. Global adjustment is one of them. And we've been talking here about these long term contracts. Global adjustment, as you might remember from previous conversations, is one of those mechanisms that bridges the gap between the spot market price, you know, the actual commodity cost of electricity that's out there, and some of the built-in cost to run the system, which includes these long term contracts. So there's a there's a fixed cost to run the system, global adjustment helps bridge that gap. The next concept here that is important to remember is this class, a strategy where the largest the largest customers, electricity customers in the province, have the opportunity to adjust how they are build global adjustment based on their contribution to the most intensive demand peaks in the province over the course of a year. So during a really high demand period, when everybody needs electricity, if they can reduce their demand, there's significant savings. And so what you're saying is there's this new this new ability for kind of a virtual connection, where, if I'm a big facility that has a high demand, and I contract with a generator, like a wind turbine that's not in contract anymore, I can say, hey, it's a peak time now I need to use some of your capacity to offset, you know, some of my demand, and there's those significant savings there. So you're absolutely right. That's a new thing in the province. We haven't had that ability up until just recently. So super fascinating, and that kind of connects our two topics today, that the large demand facilities in southern Ontario and these these generators that are potentially nearing the end of their contract and looking for what else might happen. So are you guys navigating that conversation between the greenhouses or the manufacturers and the generators?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  28:49 I'm so glad you asked. And here comes, here comes a shameless plug. Yeah? So yes. So there's a spin off company from the turbulence and Energy Lab, and it's called jailbreak labs. And jailbreak labs really represents sort of the space that is more commercial than research, but it also was sort of spurned, spurred from research. So jailbreak Labs has developed a registry, and we've been providing some webinars as well. So this, again, this is a company that that is essentially run by students, that this registry allows generators and consumers to ultimately find each other so that, so that these kinds of connections can be made. Because, as you may well imagine, there is no guarantee that the wind will be blowing at the time that you need it so, so and your load may be such that you need a different type of generation profile. So it needs to be profiling on the generation side. There needs to be profiling on the customer side. Yeah, and, you know, we've been doing this on our own for years. It was the time was right for us to sort of step in and say, because we were following this, we were real fanboys of this, of this reg, even before it came into play. And we kept bugging, you know, OEB for meetings and ISO and they, begrudgingly, to their credit, would chat with us about it, and then the next thing we know, it's announced that it's that it's happening. Was very exciting. So, so, yes, so we're really interested in seeing this happen, because it seems like such a unique, we're thrilled, because we're always interested in this sort of Second Life for assets that already have been depreciated and they're clean energy assets. Let's get everything we can out of them and to have this dynamic opportunity for them, and that will help Class A customers too hard for us to ignore.   Trevor Freeman  30:56 And you mentioned the last time we chatted about building a tool that helps evaluate and kind of injecting a little bit of AI decision making into this. Talk to us about that tool a little bit.   Dr Rupp Carriveau  31:08 Yeah. So we have a, we have a tool called quantract which is basically playing on the idea of quantifying all the risk and opportunity in in a contract. So it's really a contract visualization tool. Another way to think of it as a real time Net Present Value tool that allows renewable energy stakeholders to really, evaluate the value of their investment by not only understanding the physical life left in an asset. Let's say that a wind farm that's, you know, at 20 years and it looks like we may need to replace some blades. Do we just walk away and say, look at it. We had a good run contracts over, you know, we made some money. Let's sell the assets as they are. Or do we say, you know, I'm looking into this vppa game, and we could do okay here, but I'm not exactly sure how that's going to work and when. And so this, this tool that we've developed, will do things like will first of all identify all risk factors, and risk includes opportunities and then we'll profile them, and then builds them into basically what is more or less a glorified discounted cash flow model. So it is a way of measuring the potential value of investment in the AI space. I mean, the AI piece of it is that we have developed agents that will actually identify other things that are less, less sort of noticeable to people. In fact, this regulatory change is one of the things that our AI agents would have been looking for. Okay, now it pre it predated our tool going online, so we didn't see it, but it's the kind of thing that we'd be looking for. So the agents look for news, they look for changes online, and then, and then what happens is, they got brought, they get brought into a profiler. The profiler then determines the probability of or makes an estimate of the probability that this risk will occur. IE, a regulatory change will happen. IE, battery plant will come to town at a certain time. IE, a Costco facility will come in. Then we'll determine the potential magnitude. So there'll be uncertainty in the occurrence, there'll be uncertainty in the magnitude, and there'll be uncertainty in the timing. So we have basically statistical distribution functions for each one of those things, the likelihood of it happening, the magnitude and the timing. And so those are all modeled in so that people can push a button and, say, with this level of certainty your investment would be, would be worth this much. And that's dynamic. It's in real time. So it's changing constantly. It's being updated constantly. And so no so that that is something that goes in, and one of these virtual power purchase agreements would be one of the types of things that would go into this sort of investment timeline?   Trevor Freeman  34:22 Yeah, so it's giving these owners of these assets better data to make a decision about what comes next, as you said, and as we're talking I'm kind of doing the math here. If these are typically 20 year contracts, that's bringing us back to, you know, the mid, early, 2000s when we were really pushing to get off coal. So a lot of these assets probably started in and around that time. So you've probably got a whole bunch of customers, for lack of a better term, ready to start making decisions in the next you know, half a decade or so of what do I do with my. Sets. Have you seen this? Has it been used in the real world yet? Or is, are you getting close to that? Like, where are you at in development?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  35:07 Yeah, it actually started. It's funny. It started a little a little bit even before this craze. A couple years ago, we had, we had a manufacturer in our county come to us with, they had a great interest in, in just, just they were trying to be proactive about avoiding carbon tax and so, and they wanted to develop a new generation technology close to their facility. And so we used it there since that time. Yeah, so, so it was field proven that was a still a research contract, because they were the technology that they were interested in was, was, was not off the shelf. But since that time, we got a chance, because we represent Canada in the International Energy Agency, task 43 on wind energy digitalization. And so one of the mandates there was to develop a robust and transparent tools for investment decision support using digital twins. And we had a German partner in Fraunhofer Institute that had developed nice digital twin that would provide us remaining useful life values for things like blades, you know, towers, foundations, etc, and those are, again, those are all costs that just plug into our but they did. They didn't have a framework of how to work that into an investment decision other than, you know, you may have to replace this in three years. Okay, well, that's good to know, but we need the whole picture to make that decision, and that's sort of what we were trying to bring so the short answer is, yes, we're getting a lot of interest now, which is thrilling for us, but it's, I'll be honest with you, it's not, it's not simple, like, you know, I I've talked about it a bunch of times, so I'm pretty good at talking about it, but, but the doing it is still, it's computationally intensive and in the end, it's still an estimate. It's a, it's a, it's a calculated, quantified estimate, but it's an estimate. I think what we like about it is it's better than saying, Well, I have a hunch that it's going to go this way, but we could get beat by the hunches too. Yeah, totally, right. So, so, you know, I'm not trying to sell people things that, like I we have to be transparent about it. It's still probability.   Trevor Freeman  37:35 Well, I think if there's, if there's one thing that is very apparent, as we are well into this energy transition process that we talk about all the time here on the show. It's that the pace of change is is one of the things that's like no other time we are we are seeing things change, and that means both our demand is growing, our need to identify solutions is growing the way that we need to build out the grid and utilize the ers and utilize all these different solutions is growing at a rate that we haven't seen before, and therefore uncertainty goes up. And so to your point, yeah, we need help to make these decisions. We need better ways of doing it than just, as you say, having a hunch. That doesn't mean it's foolproof. It doesn't mean it's a guarantee.   Dr Rupp Carriveau  38:27 Nope, it is not a guarantee.   Trevor Freeman  38:30 Very cool. So Rupp, this is a great conversation. It's really fascinating to talk about to me, two areas of the energy sector that aren't really understood that well. I think the agriculture side of things, not a lot of people think about that as a major demand source. But also wind, I think we talk about solar a lot. It's a little bit more ubiquitous. People's neighbors have solar on their roofs. But wind is this unless you drive through Southern Ontario or other parts of the province where there's a lot of wind, you don't see it a lot. So it's fascinating to kind of help understand where these sectors are going. Is there anything else that the Institute is working on that that's worth chatting about here, or is what we've talked about, you know, kind of filling your day, in your students days?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  39:15 Well, actually there is something we haven't talked about the nuclear option. Literally, literally the nuclear literally the nuclear option. Yeah, so we've been really thrilled to have a growing relationship with Canadian Nuclear Laboratories, which is much closer to you than it is to me. And specifically in the connection of small modular reactors to meet these growing agricultural loads. So I have a science colleague at the University of Windsor, Dr drew Marquart, who was all hot and bothered about these s. Mrs. And he's like, we should drop one of these SMRs in Leamington. Then I this, this part I really enjoyed, because it's obviously so he came from Oak Ridge National Laboratories in the States, and he's and he's been at CNL as well. So he's fully indoctrinated into the nuclear space. But it just didn't occur to him that that would be provocative or controversial at all, that there wouldn't be some social he, you know, he's like, we can do the math. And I said, Oh yeah, yeah, we can do the math. But I'm like, I think you're missing something. I think you're missing something, right? So, but so it's, it's a super fascinating topic, and we're trying to connect, physically connect. So just before the weekend, I was in the turbulence and Energy Lab, and we were trying to commission what we believe is North America's first we're calling it a model synthetic, small modular reactor, synthetic being the key word, and that it's non nuclear, okay? And so it's non nuclear. What it what it is really and if I'm going to de glamorize it for a second, it's a mini steam thermal power plant, which doesn't embody every SMR design, but many SMRs are designed around this sort of where you've got a nuclear reaction that provides the heat, and then after that, it's kind of a steam thermal power plant. Our interest is in this physical little plant being connected to small electrolyzer, being connected to small thermal battery, being connected to a lab scale electric battery and being connected to a lab scale fully automated inlet, cucumber, small cucumber, greenhouse, mini cubes greenhouse, all this in our lab. The exciting thing around this is, you know, I I've said that I think nuclear technology needs to get out from behind the walls of nuclear facilities for people to start to appreciate it, and by that, to start doing that, you have to take the nuclear part out, which, to me, is not necessarily a deal breaker in terms of these dynamic issues that we want to solve. You know, because nukes have traditionally been said, Well, you know they're not that. You know, you can't just ramp them up and down, and that's true, you know, and small modular reactors are supposed to be considerably more nimble, but there's still lots of challenges that have to be solved in terms of having how it is an asset that is provides copious energy, but does so maybe not, not as dynamic, certainly, as a gas turbine. That how does it? How do you make it nimble, right? How do you partner it up with the right complimentary other grid assets to take advantage of what it does so well, which is crank out great amounts of heat and electricity so, so effortlessly, right? And so that's, that's sort of what we're trying to do, and connecting it to what we're calling atomic agriculture. I don't know that's a good name or not. I like it, but, but, but, yeah, so that that's another thing that we're that we're flirting with right now. We're working on. We've done a few. We've had a few contracts with Canadian Nuclear Laboratories to get us this far. We did everything computationally. We're continuing to do computational studies with them. They develop their own hybrid energy systems, optimizer software, HISO, which we use, and we are now trying to put it into sort of the hardware space. So again, just the idea that physically looking at the inertia of spinning up a turbine, the little gap, the little sort of steam powered turbine that we have in the lab that's run by an electric boiler. But our hope is to, ultimately, we're going to get the electric boiler to be mimicking the sort of reaction heating dynamics of a true reactor. So by, but through electrical control. So we'll imitate that by having sort of data from nuclear reactions, and then we'll sort of get an electrical signal analog so that we can do that and basically have a non nuclear model, small modular reactor in the lab.   Trevor Freeman  44:14 Very cool, very neat. Well, Rupp, this has been a great conversation. I really appreciate it. We do always end our interviews with a series of questions here, so I'm going to jump right into those. What's a book that you've read that you think everyone should read?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  44:31 I would say any of the Babysitters Club. That's as high as I get in the literary hierarchy. I'm barely literate so and I thoroughly enjoyed reading those books with my daughters that they were great. So I recommend any, any of the Babysitters Club titles. I mean that completely seriously, I that was the peak of my that are dog man, yeah,   Trevor Freeman  44:56 I'm about six months removed from what i. Was about an 18 month run where that's, that's all I read with my youngest kiddo. So they've, they've just moved on to a few other things. But yes, I've been steeped in the Babysitter's Club very recently.   Dr Rupp Carriveau  45:11 So good. So, you know, absolutely.   Trevor Freeman  45:14 So same question, but for a movie or a show, what's something that you recommend?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  45:17 Everyone thrilled with that question. If you're looking for a good, good true story. I've always been romantically obsessed with the ghost in the darkness, the true story of, I guess, a civil engineer trying to solve a problem of man eating lions and Tsavo. That's a, that's a, that's a tremendous movie with Val Kilmer and Michael Douglas. Yeah, that's good then, and I think for something a little more light hearted and fun, a big fan of the way, way back and youth and revolt, nice.   Trevor Freeman  46:03 If someone offered you a free round trip flight anywhere in the world, where would you go?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  46:05 I don't really like flying, I got to be honest. But if, if I was forced onto the plane, I think, I think I go to Japan. Nice. Have you been before? No, I haven't. I'd like to go. Okay, cool. You're not the first guest that has said that someone else was very That's understandable. Yeah, who is someone that you admire? I would say truly selfless people that help people when no one's looking and when it's not being tabulated for likes those people are who I aspire to be more like nice.   Trevor Freeman  46:47 And last question, what's something about the energy sector or its future that you're really excited about?   Dr Rupp Carriveau  46:53 I think maybe power to the people I really like, the movement of distributed energy resources. I'm sure there's a limit to it, but I think, I think if we have more responsibility for our own power production, and again, I can see there are limits where it's probably, you know, there's, there's a point where it's too much. I'm all for, for major centralized coordination and the security in the reliability that goes with that. But I think a little bit more on the distributed side would be nice, because I think people would understand energy better. They would they would own it more, and I think our grid would probably increase in its resiliency.   Trevor Freeman  47:37 Yeah, that's definitely something that no matter the topic, it seems, is a part of almost every conversation I have here on the show. It works its way in, and I think that's indicative of the fundamental role that decentralizing our energy production and storage is is already playing and is going to play in the years to come as we kind of tackle this energy transition drove this has been a really great conversation. I appreciate you taking the time to talk to us, and that's great to catch up. Great to chat with you again.   Dr Rupp Carriveau  48:11 Total privilege for me. Trevor, I really appreciate it. Outstanding job.   Trevor Freeman  48:15 Thanks for having me. Yeah, great to chat. Thanks for tuning in to another episode of the thinkenergy podcast, don't forget to subscribe. Wherever you listen to podcasts, and it would be great if you could leave us a review. It really helps to spread the word. As always, we would love to hear from you, whether it's feedback comments or an idea for a show or a guest. You can always reach us at thinkenergy@hydroottawa.com.  

The Busy Leader’s Podcast - A Catalyst for Inspired Action
116_Joy, Trust, Power: How NorthBay Health Rewired Its Culture From the Inside Out with Heather Resseger and Jonna Taylor

The Busy Leader’s Podcast - A Catalyst for Inspired Action

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2025 57:03


In this episode of the Healthcare Plus Podcast, Quint Studer talks to Dr. Heather Resseger and Jonna Taylor, two powerhouse leaders at NorthBay Health, a  health system in Solano County, California.Dr. Heather Resseger, senior VP, chief hospital operations officer, and chief nursing officer, and Jonna Taylor, recently promoted to director of acute care services, walk listeners through the systemwide cultural transformation that's rewiring leadership, restoring joy to the front lines, and reconnecting teams to their purpose. Together, they've built a workplace characterized by trust, ownership, and relationship-building. Best of all, it's producing measurable gains in employee engagement, patient experience, and safety.Jonna shares how one powerful reframe (asking patients, “What is your biggest worry or concern right now?”) led to a 70-point leap in patient experience scores within one month. She also explains how her team drove down patient-handling injuries to zero. From skill-building rounds to a peer-led safety culture to values-based mentoring to a bold approach to performance accountability, this conversation offers practical takeaways for any leader working to create a culture of excellence. It's a glimpse at what's possible when you truly invest in your people and trust them to do their work well. BiosHeather Resseger, DNP, RN, CNL, CPHQ, NEA-BC, is a strategic and results-driven healthcare executive with more than 20 years of leadership experience in hospital operations, nursing, and quality improvement.As senior vice president, chief hospital operations officer, and chief nursing officer at NorthBay Health, Dr. Resseger leads transformative initiatives focused on acute care strategy, patient experience, and operational excellence. She is widely recognized for her role in achieving Magnet designation with distinction and for consistently delivering high-quality clinical outcomes. Dr. Resseger brings deep expertise in high-reliability practices, employee engagement, and cost reduction. Her leadership has also been instrumental in advancing infection prevention protocols, behavioral health planning, and crisis response during the COVID-19 pandemic.She holds a doctor of nursing practice in executive leadership and is deeply committed to fostering strong, values-based healthcare cultures. Her approach is grounded in real-world experience navigating complex health systems and a steadfast dedication to improving patient care. Jonna Taylor, RN, BSN, MS-HCA, NE-BC, is the director of acute care services at NorthBay Health. Jonna-Lynn Taylor began a dedicated career in oncology nursing, serving patients and supporting care teams from 2004 to 2013. In 2013, she transitioned into a nurse leadership role, bringing a passion for clinical excellence and team development to the forefront. In 2017, Jonna advanced to a Nurse management position, where she led initiatives to improve patient outcomes and staff engagement. She assumed the role as Nurse manager at NorthBay in 2023.  Most recently, in June 2025, Jonna was appointed Director of Acute Care Services, where she continues to drive high-quality, patient-centered care across acute care settings.  

Kultur
Happy birthday CNL

Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2025 21:56


Den Nationale Literaturzenter féiert haut säin 30. Gebuertsdag. D'Nathalie Jacoby, Directrice vum CNL ass Invitée beim Valerija Berdi fir iwwer hir Zäit am CNl awer och iwwer Perspektiven ze schwätzen.

Nursing Strategies for Success Podcast
Even in the Face of Adversity - Nurses CAN Position Themselves to THRIVE Within the Profession!

Nursing Strategies for Success Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2025 33:08


During episode 2 of season 4 of the Nursing Strategies for Success Podcast, I had the pleasure of speaking with Kristen Gutierrez, MSN, RN, CNL, CNRN, SCRN - a Nurse Career Coach who specializes in helping Nurse discover their strengths, passion, and purpose so they can find jobs that they love and that they can THRIVE within!

The Healing Podcast - Brought to you by MarinHealth
Diabetes & Exercise: A Personal Journey

The Healing Podcast - Brought to you by MarinHealth

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2025


MarinHealth nurse Kelly Stroup shares her personal experiences on the path from non-exerciser to half marathon runner, as well as insights on managing blood sugar and enhancing mental well-being through physical activity.  Learn more about Kelly Stroup, MSN, CNL, CDE 

Heart to Heart Nurses
Nurse Leadership: Clinical Nurse Specialists and Process Change

Heart to Heart Nurses

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2025 15:41


Learn more about the role of Clinical Nurse Specialist, and how these individuals can drive positive outcomes for patients. Guest Laura Mack, MSN, RN, CNL, HF-CERT, PCNA's Heart Failure Prevention 2025 awardee, describes a nurse-led process improvements for patients with heart failure that yielded substantial progress in reducing rehospitalizations and mortality.PCNA Heart Failure Prevention Award: pcna.net/career-development/awards-grants/heart-failure- prevention-award/AHA Get With The Guidelines: heart.org/en/professional/quality-improvement/get-with-the-guidelines National Association of Clinical Nurse Specialists: nacns.org/about-us/what-is-a-cns/ See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Vois Lis Voix Là : le Podcast de ActuaLitté
Au Livrodrome, les jeunes nous parlent sans filtre de lecture

Vois Lis Voix Là : le Podcast de ActuaLitté

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2025 5:05


Les derniers chiffres du CNL concernant les habitudes de lecture des français mettent en avant un décrochage global de l'ensemble de la population. Cette baisse du temps de lecture touche toutes les catégories d'âges, à part les plus 65 ans. Si les jeunes n'ont en apparence pas les résultats les plus alarmants, ils sont ceux qui concentrent le plus d'inquiétude. Alors, fausse peur ou vrai danger ? Pour nous en faire une idée plus fidèle, nous sommes allés parler aux principaux intéressés. C'était à Asnières-sur-Seine, à l'occasion du Livrodrome, le parc d'attraction littéraire du CNL.

Au bonheur des livres
Au bonheur de la lecture avec Susie Morgenstern, Guillaume Gallienne et Régine Hatchondo

Au bonheur des livres

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2025 32:02


La lecture est à la fête pour le dernier numéro de la saison de « Au bonheur des livres », qui accueille sur son plateau trois personnalités très différentes, mais toutes engagées, à leur façon, dans la promotion de notre activité favorite. Claire Chazal reçoit ainsi deux authentiques vedettes dans leur domaine, qui n'ont pas craint de faire quelque chose comme un pas de côté…Susie Morgenstern, d'abord, que tout le monde connaît, pas seulement pour ses lunettes fantasques et son accent américain, mais surtout pour ses formidables ouvrages à l'attention de la jeunesse… or, cette autrice émérite à l'imagination si fertile a choisi de se tourner cette fois, avec « Sadie à Brides-les-Bains » (Ed. Eyrolles), vers un lectorat plus large : son livre, plein de fantaisie, est recommandé pour tous les âges ! Guillaume Gallienne lui aussi est sorti de sa zone de confort : le comédien et réalisateur que l'on connaît comme lecteur magnifique et passeur de littérature, est devenu cette fois auteur, en entrant dans la belle collection « Ma nuit au musée ». Dans « Le buveur de brume » (Ed. Stock), il livre un beau récit autobiographique assez inattendu sur ses origines géorgiennes… Ces deux personnalités sont rejointes enfin par Régine Hatchondo, la présidente du CNL, le Centre national du livre, défenseuse de la lecture auprès de tous les publics et qui présentera l'opération « Partir en Livre », sur le thème « Les animaux et nous », qui comme chaque année travaille à sensibiliser ludiquement la jeunesse au bonheur de la lecture. De quoi préparer un bel été de livres ! Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

De vive(s) voix
Partir en livre : les jeunes ne lisent plus... mais est-ce une fatalité ?

De vive(s) voix

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2025 29:00


La onzième édition de l'opération Partir en livre, dont le thème retenu cette année est « Les animaux et nous » aura lieu du 18 juin au 20 juillet 2025. Comment donner le goût des mots et de la lecture quand on sait que les Français lisent de moins en moins et que la part de lecture quotidienne n'a jamais été basse depuis dix ans, selon le dernier baromètre du Centre national du livre ?  C'est le sens de l'opération Partir en livre initiée par le CNL pour inciter les jeunes à lire pendant les vacances et pour transmettre le goût de la lecture. Des centaines d'évènements tels que chasse aux trésors, lectures musicales, ateliers… à l'initiative des bibliothèques, médiathèques pour rendre la lecture ludique.  Invités :  • Lord Esperanza, écrivain, auteur, rappeur, de son vrai nom Théodore Desprez, est né à Paris en 1996. Il se fait parfois appeler « L'enfant du siècle ». Son premier nom de scène, Speranza, vient du roman Vendredi ou les Limbes du Pacifique de Michel Tournier (1924-2016). Son dernier album Derrière les montagnes est sorti en avril dernier.  Il est le parrain de la 11è édition de Partir en Livre.  Il est important de mettre la lecture au centre du débat public parce que cela fait travailler la machine à rêves. C'est fondamental dans notre société gangrénée par la violence. La lecture apporte de l'empathie. Elle peut changer une vie.  Lord Esperanza  • Julie Colombet, auteure-illustratrice de nombreux albums jeunesse, créatrice de l'affiche de la 11è édition de Partir en Livre.  Elle est née à Saint-Étienne en 1983 et se passionne très jeune pour le dessin. Son premier album jeunesse, L'éléphant et le poisson, paraît en 2010 au Petit Lézard.  Pour Partir en livre, elle animera également un atelier artistique pour les enfants le 2 juillet à Soucieu-en-Jarrest (département du Rhône, en Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes) à la bibliothèque Éclats de lire autour de son album Le Club des lemmings très distingués (Casterman, 2019). Quand j'étais petite, je n'aimais pas lire. Je trouvais cela ennuyeux. Le goût de la lecture est venu plus tard. Il peut arriver à tout âge. Il faut décomplexer les enfants là-dessus. Julie Colombet Partir en livre est une manifestation du ministère de la Culture organisée par le Centre national du livre. Retrouvez toutes les manifestations ici. Et si vous aimez la lecture, vous pouvez suivre le compte Instagram de Maxime Biaggi. Et comme chaque mercredi, retrouvez la chronique de Lucie Bouteloup, La puce à l'oreille. Cette semaine, elle vous propose de découvrir l'expression « C'est carré ! » avec la lexicographe Géraldine Moinard.  Une chronique en partenariat avec les éditions Le Robert.  Programmation musicale : l'artiste Lord Esperanza avec le titre La nuit, je vois. 

De vive(s) voix
Partir en livre : les jeunes ne lisent plus... mais est-ce une fatalité ?

De vive(s) voix

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2025 29:00


La onzième édition de l'opération Partir en livre, dont le thème retenu cette année est « Les animaux et nous » aura lieu du 18 juin au 20 juillet 2025. Comment donner le goût des mots et de la lecture quand on sait que les Français lisent de moins en moins et que la part de lecture quotidienne n'a jamais été basse depuis dix ans, selon le dernier baromètre du Centre national du livre ?  C'est le sens de l'opération Partir en livre initiée par le CNL pour inciter les jeunes à lire pendant les vacances et pour transmettre le goût de la lecture. Des centaines d'évènements tels que chasse aux trésors, lectures musicales, ateliers… à l'initiative des bibliothèques, médiathèques pour rendre la lecture ludique.  Invités :  • Lord Esperanza, écrivain, auteur, rappeur, de son vrai nom Théodore Desprez, est né à Paris en 1996. Il se fait parfois appeler « L'enfant du siècle ». Son premier nom de scène, Speranza, vient du roman Vendredi ou les Limbes du Pacifique de Michel Tournier (1924-2016). Son dernier album Derrière les montagnes est sorti en avril dernier.  Il est le parrain de la 11è édition de Partir en Livre.  Il est important de mettre la lecture au centre du débat public parce que cela fait travailler la machine à rêves. C'est fondamental dans notre société gangrénée par la violence. La lecture apporte de l'empathie. Elle peut changer une vie.  Lord Esperanza  • Julie Colombet, auteure-illustratrice de nombreux albums jeunesse, créatrice de l'affiche de la 11è édition de Partir en Livre.  Elle est née à Saint-Étienne en 1983 et se passionne très jeune pour le dessin. Son premier album jeunesse, L'éléphant et le poisson, paraît en 2010 au Petit Lézard.  Pour Partir en livre, elle animera également un atelier artistique pour les enfants le 2 juillet à Soucieu-en-Jarrest (département du Rhône, en Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes) à la bibliothèque Éclats de lire autour de son album Le Club des lemmings très distingués (Casterman, 2019). Quand j'étais petite, je n'aimais pas lire. Je trouvais cela ennuyeux. Le goût de la lecture est venu plus tard. Il peut arriver à tout âge. Il faut décomplexer les enfants là-dessus. Julie Colombet Partir en livre est une manifestation du ministère de la Culture organisée par le Centre national du livre. Retrouvez toutes les manifestations ici. Et si vous aimez la lecture, vous pouvez suivre le compte Instagram de Maxime Biaggi. Et comme chaque mercredi, retrouvez la chronique de Lucie Bouteloup, La puce à l'oreille. Cette semaine, elle vous propose de découvrir l'expression « C'est carré ! » avec la lexicographe Géraldine Moinard.  Une chronique en partenariat avec les éditions Le Robert.  Programmation musicale : l'artiste Lord Esperanza avec le titre La nuit, je vois. 

C'est presque sérieux
Marche-en-Famenne vaut vraiment le Détour (3) : Selfie, charlatan et Confrérie du Matoufé

C'est presque sérieux

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2025 40:40


L'origine du mot charlatan, la source de revenus étonnante d'une petite île des Caraïbes, est-ce le mot « selfie » ou « hashtag » qui est apparu en premier, la particularité des vitraux de l'église de Waha dans la commune marchoise, voici quelques-uns des thèmes abordés dans ce jeu, mais quel binôme Cédric/Olivier Fraipont ou Thierry/Xavier Rainotte va réussir à répondre le plus et mieux possibles aux questions de Walid?! On explore également une nouvelle facette de la région, gastronomique cette fois, en compagnie de Karine Bourguignon, membre de la Confrérie du Matoufé depuis 49 ans (et en fut grand maître durant 25 ans) http://www.confreries.be/CNL/conf/matoufe/index.htm Merci pour votre écoute Salut les copions, c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 16h à 17h sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes de Salut les copions sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/19688 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

NP Pulse: The Voice of the Nurse Practitioner (AANP)
147. Addressing Common Mental Disorders in Today's Youth: Roundup on Adolescent Health PT2

NP Pulse: The Voice of the Nurse Practitioner (AANP)

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2025 64:45 Transcription Available


On this compelling episode of NP Pulse: The Voice of the Nurse Practitioner®, Dr. Jessica Peck, DNP, APRN, CPNP-PC, CNE, CNL, FAANP, FAAN, and guest Dr. Ashley Hodges, PhD, CRNP, WHNP-BC, PMHNP-BC, FAANP, FAAN, dive deep into the adolescent mental health crisis, shedding light on the alarming trends affecting today's youth. From the long-term impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic to the pressure of growing up in a hyper-connected digital world, this discussion explores critical risk factors, early warning signs and practical strategies for nurse practitioners (NPs) and families alike. This episode also emphasizes the importance of upstream prevention, holistic care, reducing stigma and integrating mental health support into primary care. Drawing from decades of clinical experience, Jessica and Ashley offer compassionate, expert insight on how to recognize and respond to adolescent mental health challenges, while highlighting resources, screenings and training opportunities for NPs committed to making a difference.

Med-Surg Moments - The AMSN Podcast
Ep. 151 - The AMSN Story With Co-Founder Alice Poyss

Med-Surg Moments - The AMSN Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2025 36:41


Ep. 151 - The AMSN Story With Co-Founder Alice Poyss A cinematic journey into the story of AMSN's humble beginnings with AMSN Co-Founder Alice Poyss. Join Alice along with special guest co-host AMSN President Kristi Reguin-Hartman and the co-hosts as they journey back in time to Philadelphia in 1990. PLUS a very important opening message every med-surg nurse must hear.    SPECIAL GUEST Alicemarie S. Poyss, RN, Ph.D., CNL, APRN-BC, FAMSN works at Drexel University, College of Nursing & Health Professions since1992. She was the Track Director for the MSN Clinical Nurse Leader Track. Particular clinical expertise is gastrointestinal surgery, nutrition support and nutrition screening of adults and elderly. She received her postmaster`s certificate as an Acute Care Nurse Practitioner, and certification as an Acute Care Nurse Practitioner and Clinical Nurse Leader. She holds certification from ANA as a medical-Surgical nurse Specialist. She is co-founder of the Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses, a specialty nursing organization created for medical-surgical nurses. In 2024, Dr. Poyss was inducted into the inaugural group of Fellows, of the Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses (FAMSN). Dr. Poyss is currently practicing in a primary medical group managing palliative care for Elderly homebound patients. She has taught in both undergraduate and graduate Nursing programs in three Universities. Dr. Poyss's research interests in the clinical areas include nursing intervention/outcome studies, and nursing treatment/outcome studies. She has participated with the Iowa Nursing Intervention Classification project and authored two nursing interventional labels for the project. Other research interests include program evaluation, and effects of alternate teaching styles with student learning. Funded research includes Evaluation of an Alternative Care Delivery System in Critical Care Nursing and preventing readmission for CHF patients to Acute Care.   MEET OUR CO-HOSTS Samantha Bayne, MSN, RN, CMSRN, NPD-BC is a nursing professional development practitioner in the inland northwest specializing in medical-surgical nursing. The first four years of her practice were spent bedside on a busy ortho/neuro unit where she found her passion for newly graduated RNs, interdisciplinary collaboration, and professional governance. Sam is an unwavering advocate for medical-surgical nursing as a specialty and enjoys helping nurses prepare for specialty certification.    Kellye' McRae, MSN-Ed, RN is a dedicated Med-Surg Staff Nurse and Unit Based Educator based in South Georgia, with 12 years of invaluable nursing experience. She is passionate about mentoring new nurses, sharing her clinical wisdom to empower the next generation of nurses. Kellye' excels in bedside teaching, blending hands-on training with compassionate patient care to ensure both nurses and patients thrive. Her commitment to education and excellence makes her a cornerstone of her healthcare team.   Marcela Salcedo, RN, BSN is a Floatpool nightshift nurse in the Chicagoland area, specializing in step-down and medical-surgical care. A member of AMSN and the Hektoen Nurses, she combines her passion for nursing with the healing power of the arts and humanities. As a mother of four, Marcela is reigniting her passion for nursing by embracing the chaos of caregiving, fostering personal growth, and building meaningful connections that inspire her work.   Eric Torres, ADN, RN, CMSRN is a California native that has always dreamed of seeing the World, and when that didn't work out, he set his sights on nursing.  Eric is beyond excited to be joining the AMSN podcast and having a chance to share his stories and experiences of being a bedside medical-surgical nurse.   Maritess M. Quinto, DNP, RN, NPD-BC, CMSRN is a clinical educator currently leading a team of educators who is passionately helping healthcare colleagues, especially newly graduate nurses. She was born and raised in the Philippines and immigrated to the United States with her family in Florida. Her family of seven (three girls and two boys with her husband who is also a Registered Nurse) loves to travel, especially to Disney World. She loves to share her experiences about parenting, travelling, and, of course, nursing!   Sydney Wall, RN, BSN, CMSRN has been a med surg nurse for 5 years. After graduating from the University of Rhode Island in 2019, Sydney commissioned into the Navy and began her nursing career working on a cardiac/telemetry unit in Bethesda, Maryland.  Currently she is stationed overseas, providing care for service members and their families.  During her free time, she enjoys martial arts and traveling.   

Les histoires de 28 Minutes
Antoine de Caunes et son père / Le lecteur est-il une espèce en voie de disparition ?

Les histoires de 28 Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 45:55


L'émission 28 minutes du 01/05/2025 Antoine de Caunes et son père : la possibilité d'une îleAntoine De Caunes a de multiples casquettes. Animateur, auteur, réalisateur, humoriste, rédacteur en chef du magazine “Vieux”, il s'essaye aujourd'hui au roman graphique. En mars dernier, il a fait paraître aux éditions Dargaud “Il déserte - Georges ou la vie sauvage”, un récit intime, illustré par Xavier Coste. Dans cette bande dessinée, il est question de son père, Georges De Caunes, et de son âme d'explorateur. Ce roman graphique relate son départ en 1962 pour l'île déserte Eiao, au cœur de l'archipel des Marquises en Polynésie française, alors qu'Antoine De Caunes n'avait que huit ans. Pour retracer cette histoire hors du commun, il s'appuie sur les chroniques diffusées par son père à la radio à l'époque, ainsi que son journal intime. Dans une écriture personnelle, il raconte comment il a vécu ce départ : “Je ne comprends pas. Il s'en va pour un an ! Quand on en a huit, c'est une éternité.”Le lecteur est-il une espèce en voie de disparition ? Selon la dernière étude du Centre national du livre (CNL) parue le 8 avril, 45 % des Français déclarent lire quotidiennement. Ce chiffre n'a jamais été aussi bas depuis la mise en place de ce baromètre biannuel il y a dix ans. Dans un communiqué, la présidente du CNL, Régine Hatchondo, a confié son inquiétude : "La lecture est menacée." Comment analyser cette chute du temps consacré aux livres ? Est-ce la faute des écrans qui captent l'attention de potentiels lecteurs ? Le baromètre du CNL apporte des réponses : 27 % des lecteurs déclarent faire autre chose en même temps qu'ils lisent, comme envoyer des messages, regarder une vidéo ou aller sur les réseaux sociaux. Leur étude pointe aussi des différences entre les générations, même si l'attrait des écrans touche toute la population. Les moins de 25 ans consacrent plus de 35 heures par semaine aux écrans, contre 3 heures 18 minutes aux livres. En moyenne, les écrans absorbent 23 heures 27 minutes du temps de tous les sondés chaque semaine, contre 3 heures 40 minutes pour la lecture. Enfin, Xavier Mauduit mène l'enquête pour comprendre pourquoi le muguet est célébré le 1er mai. Avec Marie Bonnisseau, direction les Pays-Bas où une œuvre d'Andy Warhol a probablement été jetée à la poubelle par erreur pendant les travaux de rénovation de la mairie d'une petite commune.28 minutes est le magazine d'actualité d'ARTE, présenté par Élisabeth Quin du lundi au jeudi à 20h05. Renaud Dély est aux commandes de l'émission le vendredi et le samedi. Ce podcast est coproduit par KM et ARTE Radio. Enregistrement 1er mai 2025 Présentation Élisabeth Quin Production KM, ARTE Radio

Les histoires de 28 Minutes
[Débat] Le lecteur est-il une espèce en voie de disparition ?

Les histoires de 28 Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2025 23:45


L'émission 28 minutes du 01/05/2025 Le lecteur est-il une espèce en voie de disparition ? Selon la dernière étude du Centre national du livre (CNL) parue le 8 avril, 45 % des Français déclarent lire quotidiennement. Ce chiffre n'a jamais été aussi bas depuis la mise en place de ce baromètre biannuel il y a dix ans. Dans un communiqué, la présidente du CNL, Régine Hatchondo, a confié son inquiétude : "La lecture est menacée." Comment analyser cette chute du temps consacré aux livres ? Est-ce la faute des écrans qui captent l'attention de potentiels lecteurs ? Le baromètre du CNL apporte des réponses : 27 % des lecteurs déclarent faire autre chose en même temps qu'ils lisent, comme envoyer des messages, regarder une vidéo ou aller sur les réseaux sociaux. Leur étude pointe aussi des différences entre les générations, même si l'attrait des écrans touche toute la population. Les moins de 25 ans consacrent plus de 35 heures par semaine aux écrans, contre 3 heures 18 minutes aux livres. En moyenne, les écrans absorbent 23 heures 27 minutes du temps de tous les sondés chaque semaine, contre 3 heures 40 minutes pour la lecture. On en débat avec Françoise Benhamou, présidente du Cercle des économistes, spécialiste de l'économie de la culture ; Erik Orsenna, écrivain et membre de l'Académie française  et Jules Stimpfling, créateur de contenu culture, fondateur du média “Le Crayon”. 28 minutes est le magazine d'actualité d'ARTE, présenté par Élisabeth Quin du lundi au jeudi à 20h05. Renaud Dély est aux commandes de l'émission le vendredi et le samedi. Ce podcast est coproduit par KM et ARTE Radio. Enregistrement 1er mai Présentation Élisabeth Quin Production KM, ARTE Radio

C dans l'air
Régine Hatchondo - Les français délaissent les livres pour les écrans

C dans l'air

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2025 10:21


C dans l'air l'invitée du 11 avril 2025 : Régine Hatchondo, présidente du Centre national du livreAujourd'hui débute le festival du Livre à Paris, au Grand Palais. Plus de 100.000 visiteurs sont attendus jusqu'à dimanche inclus. Un événement qui se déroule dans un contexte morose pour la lecture. D'après le dernier baromètre du Centre national du livre (CNL), mené par Ipsos, seuls 45% des Français déclarent lire quotidiennement, sur format numérique ou papier. Les 50-64 ans sont ceux qui décrochent" le plus, avec une baisse de 15 points par rapport à la dernière étude du CNL, publiée en 2023.Autre chute vertigineuse, les Français lisent en moyenne dix-huit livres par an, quatre de moins qu'il y a deux ans. On atteint même huit ouvrages en moins chez les 15-24 ans et les plus de 65 ans. Ce sont les 25-34 ans qui redressent la barre, avec vingt-sept livres lus en moyenne sur un an, soit plus du double des 35-49 ans, la tranche d'âge qui en lit le moins. L'ennemi principal de la lecture, ce sont les écrans : les Français passent quasiment autant de temps par jour (3 h 21) devant un écran qu'ils le font par semaine (3 h 40) à lire un livre. Mais même quand les Français lisent, ils gardent leur smartphone à portée de main. Plus d'un quart d'entre eux envoient des messages, vont sur les réseaux sociaux ou regardent des vidéos tout en lisant. Régine Hatchondo, directrice du Centre national du livre, est notre invitée. Elle reviendra avec nous sur la pratique des Français en matière de lecture, et appellera à un "sursaut" face aux écrans. Le Centre national du livre appelle notamment les Français à lire au moins un quart d'heure par jour.

Soccer Down Here
SoccerForUS Pod, Episode 114: USMNT Disappoints at Nations League Finals

Soccer Down Here

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 80:30


Two matches, two losses, a whole lot of disappointment from the USMNT.Bart, Caleb (@USMNTCorner) and Thomas (@USKeeper) gather to share in the grief and look to solutions going forward. Support the show: buymeacoffee.com/soccerforuspod

The Immigration Conversation | Presented by Fragomen
Nations League Update | #FragomenFC - Ep.6

The Immigration Conversation | Presented by Fragomen

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 13:38


With the 2025 CONCACAF Nations League concluding with Mexico's triumphant win of their first CNL trophy, Fragomen's podcast series, #FragomenFC: Passport to North America 2026, is back with a tournament review! Join co-hosts Partner Rick Lamanna (Toronto, Canada), Senior Manager Sergio Flores (Mexico City, Mexico), and Associate Jake Paul Minster (Boston, United States) as they provide an in-depth, country-by-country analysis of the highs and lows experienced by their respective national teams throughout the competition.

Soccer Down Here
Soccer Down Here AM 3/24/25: ATLUTD Review and USMNT Nations League Breakdown

Soccer Down Here

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 131:16


It's a busy Reaction Monday on SDH AM- two topics took the time929TheGame's Abe Gordon looks at ATLUTD and FC Cincinnati- we also have your highlights from the match and Twitch Pitch thoughts in Hour 1Hour 2 is the CONCACAF Nations League USMNT Breakdown with SoccerForUSPod's Bart Keeler. We look at all the questions and hear from Christian Pulisic and analysis of where the CANMNT  may be after the tournament showing high than the US

Soccer Down Here
Soccer For US Pod's Bart Keeler on SDH AM 3/21/25: The Shocking USMNT Semi

Soccer Down Here

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2025 23:07


Bart gives his instant analysis from the shocking USMNT loss in the CONCACAF Nations League semi to Panama and what to look at going forward with Canada in the third-place match

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast
Call It What You Want LIVE from LA! | USMNT roster replacements, Poch embraces MLS, USL votes for Pro/Rel, more! (Soccer 3/20)

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2025 72:05


On the eve of the Concacaf Nations League semifinals, Jimmy Conrad, Charlie Davies, and Tony Meola do the show in front of a live audience for the first time in CIWYW history! With a crowd of American Outlaws in attendance, the guys discuss the power of the World Cup and the pressure on Mauricio Pochettino to deliver a fourth successive CNL title (02:42). Nico Cantor joins to talk about the critical loss of Antonee Robinson ahead of the clash against Panama, and the fact there are now nine MLS players on the USMNT roster (20:18)! Paul Tenorio returns for a lively discussion about the major news that USL voting to adopt promotion and relegation, and what the impact it might have on young American players (47:03). Then, it's CIWYW trivia time, and the fans try their best to trigger the crew (54:55). Call It What You Want is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Call It What You Want team on X: @JimmyConrad, @CharlieDavies9, @TMeola1 Visit the betting arena on CBSSports.com for all the latest in sportsbook reviews and sportsbook promos for betting on soccer. For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ You can also watch Call It What You Want on the CBS Sports Golazo Network for free on connected TVs and mobile devices through the CBS Sports app, Pluto TV, and on CBSSports.com as well as Paramount+. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Soccer Down Here
Soccer For US Podcast, Episode 113: 2025 Concacaf Nations League Finals Roster Talk

Soccer Down Here

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 67:39


Bart and Thomas discuss how and why USMNT head coach Mauricio Pochettino chose the 23 players to represent us at the Concacaf Nations League Finals this year. Follow the show: @soccerforuspod  Support the show: buymeacoffee.com/soccerforuspod.

Soccer Down Here
Soccer Down Here AM 3/17/25: Reaction Monday, ATLUTD, MLS, Inter Miami, Red Cards, CONCACAF Nations League, USMNT

Soccer Down Here

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 126:21


It's a reaction monday on SDH AM where we look back at the 2-1, last minute loss, to Inter MiamiWe go over the stats and the postgame reaction as Atlanta United drops points at home929TheGame's Abe Gordon drops by to talk about the new faces and the lack of finished chancesIn Hour 2, SoccerForUSPod's Bart Keeler comes in to talk about refs, cards, calls, and the laws of the game (LOTG)- how they all were looked at this weekend. We also look at the NWSL start and the CONCACAF Nations League roster 

George Buhnici | #IGDLCC
"VINE POLIȚIA"... INTERNETULUI - VALENTIN JUCAN președinte CNA #IGDLCC 272

George Buhnici | #IGDLCC

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 93:12


VINE POLIȚIA ... INTERNETULUI - VALENTIN JUCAN #IGDLCC 272[00:00:00] Valentin Jucan: Deci te-a dezamăgit Mercedes-ul, te-a dezamăgit [00:00:05] Volkswagen-ul, de Tesla nici nu se mai pune problema, hai să luăm măgarul.[00:00:10][00:00:13] George Buhnici: Nu sau cum? [00:00:15] Noi aici pe internet suntem un pic tămători de toți ăștia care vor să vină să ne reglementeze. Noi ne-am obișnuit că aici putem [00:00:20] face orice. Nu vrea[00:00:21] Valentin Jucan: nimeni să vă reglementeze. Noi de fapt, trebuie să rămânem [00:00:25] prieteni. Reglementatorii și cei de pe online trebuie să rămânem prieteni. Pentru că aici nu este [00:00:30] vorba despre voi, cei din online care sunt aproape de finalul vacanței.[00:00:35][00:00:35] Când ajungem și discutăm despre ce înseamnă conținutul ilegal o să ne dăm seama cu toții Că [00:00:40] nici nu ne-am propus sau cei mai mulți nu ne-am propus, sau nu v-ați propus să aveți astfel de abordări. [00:00:45] Niciodată nu vei găsi rezolvarea problemei tale de [00:00:50] sănătate pe Facebook. Niciodată. Știu. [00:00:55] Știu. Deci nu mă lua cu creme.[00:00:57] Nu. După. [00:01:00] Sau cu tratamentele de... nu. Ginkgo biloba? Deci te duci [00:01:05] la medic.[00:01:05] George Buhnici: Una dintre chestiile care sperie pe românii este că vor ăștia să ne facă omosexuali sau părinte 1, părinte 2. [00:01:10] Și eu când am fost prima oară în Germania...[00:01:12] Valentin Jucan: Nu vă suprați, nu închideți ușa, că s-ar putea să... Să ne tragă curentul. [00:01:15] Nu să vină unul să ne facă omosexuali.[00:01:17] Pa mândoi. Să ne oblige. Cum îți [00:01:20] imaginezi chestia asta? Că de asta fac mișto. Cum să vină cineva să te oblige să fii omosexual? Explică-mi, te Părinte[00:01:24] George Buhnici: 1, [00:01:25] părinte 2. Nu o să-ți mai dea voie să zici că e femeie și bărbat, o să fie doar părinte 1, părinte 2. Nu[00:01:29] Valentin Jucan: poți să-i [00:01:30] interzici. Am aizistat această teză Hai să închidem TikTok-ul.[00:01:35][00:01:36] Și în acest moment sunt cel puțin alte 25 de [00:01:40] platforme pe care le putem downloada din App Store și din Google Play, care [00:01:45] sunt identice TikTok, care sunt funcționale, au poate câteva zeci de mii de utilizatori și așteaptă să se [00:01:50] mute de pe TikTok pe aceeași. Și ce ai rezolvat? Am închis TikTok, se deschide mâine[00:01:53] George Buhnici: pârpoc.[00:01:54] Salutare [00:01:55] tuturor și bine v-am regăsit la EGDLCC, adică informații gratis despre lucruri care costă, iar astăzi avem o [00:02:00] ediție un pic mai special, pentru că avem o discuție întreagă pe internet despre poliția internetului, mai nou. În [00:02:05] sfârșit vine poliția internetului peste noi sau nu? Suntem aici împreună cu, o să vă bine să [00:02:10] credeți, chiar șeful CNEA Bine ați venit, domnule Jucan![00:02:12] Valentin Jucan: Bună seara! Bună seara? Bună [00:02:15] ziua! Bună Suntem pe internet. Bună ziua și nu am chipiu cu mine. [00:02:20][00:02:20] George Buhnici: Domnul Jucan m-a rugat să-i zic Valentin înainte să începem înregistrarea, așa că o să îi spun pe numele [00:02:25] mic. Mulțumesc foarte mult! Cu[00:02:26] Valentin Jucan: mare plăcere[00:02:26] George Buhnici: Știu că ai făcut un efort să vii astăzi aici. [00:02:30] Acum nu știu dacă o să rămânem buni prieteni după discuția de astăzi pentru că noi aici pe internet suntem un pic [00:02:35] tămători de toți ăștia care vor să vină să ne reglementeze.[00:02:37] Noi ne-am obișnuit ca ce putem face orice. Putem spune [00:02:40] orice, doar că am impresia că se cam termină vacanța.[00:02:43] Valentin Jucan: E adevărat? [00:02:45] Nu vrea nimeni să vă reglementeze. Noi de fapt, trebuie să rămânem prieteni, [00:02:50] să rămânem noi doi prieteni și să rămânem [00:02:55] Reglementatorii și cei de pe online trebuie să rămânem prieteni.[00:02:57] Pentru că aici nu este vorba despre [00:03:00] voi, cei din online care sunt aproape de finalul vacanței. [00:03:05] Când ajungem și discutăm despre ce înseamnă conținutul ilegal o să ne dăm seama cu toții că [00:03:10] nici nu-am propus sau cei mai mulți nu ne-am propus sau nu v-ați propus să aveți astfel de abordări. [00:03:15][00:03:15] George Buhnici: Unii ca mine nu prea au de ales.[00:03:16] Dacă oriceva nasol pe YouTube, YouTube mi-l blochează înainte să-i dau [00:03:20] publish.[00:03:20] Valentin Jucan: Sunt multe momente în care are scapă, pentru că sunt foarte multe [00:03:25] upload-uri și nu numai din partea celor care sunt creatori, fiindcă tu știi foarte bine și ai explicat de atâtea ori [00:03:30] că Regule sunt diferite pentru creator.[00:03:32] Cele mai multe situații [00:03:35] nasoale, hai să spunem așa, să vorbim liber, cele mai multe astfel de situații nu se găsesc [00:03:40] atunci când discutăm despre creator, ci despre persoane fizice [00:03:45] simple, persoane care urcă conținut. Și atunci de exemplu când discutăm despre pornografie [00:03:50] infantilă, nu e vorba de vacanța despre care discutam mai înainte Nu, în[00:03:52] George Buhnici: niciun caz.[00:03:53] Dar se mai poate așa [00:03:55] ceva? Mai[00:03:55] Valentin Jucan: există? Da, există și există și vânzare de droguri, [00:04:00] la fel de simplu pe platforme Dar asta de obicei se întâmplă pe[00:04:02] George Buhnici: canale de Telegram, în tot felul [00:04:05] de chat-uri de pe Insta am mai auzit. Unde mai sunt noi din astea? Că tu mai știi. Reddit. [00:04:10] Adică sunt niște chestii genul ăsta.[00:04:12] Pe mine mă preocupă înainte de orice să-i lămuresc pe [00:04:15] confrații mei creatori, ca să zic așa, de pe internet, dacă vine sau nu ce ne-au după [00:04:20] noi.[00:04:20] Valentin Jucan: Vine ce ne-au după niște subiecte nu după niște oameni. Atunci când discutăm despre [00:04:25] instigare la violență și merge pe principiul ce este [00:04:30] ilegal în offline, ce este ilegal pe stradă hai să spunem așa e ilegal și în online, [00:04:35] pentru că vorbim despre spații publice, discutăm despre niște principii și despre niște [00:04:40] valori De care vrem să ne protejăm atunci când ne protejăm închizând ușa acasă [00:04:45] pentru că nu vreau să-mi intre niște hoți la fel din spațiu public în intimitatea mea, la fel [00:04:50] din spațiu public din online în zona mea de confort există [00:04:55] niște reguli care nu sunt ale geneaului mare atenție, deci această poliție despre care vorbeam, Big [00:05:00] Brother sau 1984 sau Ministerul[00:05:02] George Buhnici: Adevărul, le mai auzit eu[00:05:04] Valentin Jucan: [00:05:05] Ministerul Adevărul este folosit de cei care într-adevăr și-l imaginează și cei care folosesc această marotă cred [00:05:10] că sunt cei care ar putea să-l deseneze cel mai bine eu ca autoritate nu știu dacă [00:05:15] aș ști să-l desenez pentru că funcționează în niște parametri foarte clare, acești [00:05:20] parametri sunt europeni, CNA există în toate țările membre din Uniunea Europeană nu o să vă vină să [00:05:25] credeți iar directiva care implementează această [00:05:30] acest set de reglementări este o directivă europeană pe care toate [00:05:35] parlamentele naționale le-au Negociat și le-au acceptat inclusiv statul [00:05:40] român.[00:05:41] Deci discutăm despre un set de[00:05:43] George Buhnici: valori. 2025, când m-am [00:05:45] apucat de la televiziune exista deja CNA, știam cu toții de ce e acolo, doar că în 2025 [00:05:50] renegociem Fiecare instituție. Și suntem în punctul în care trebuie să [00:05:55] explicăm de ce avem nevoie de CNA, la ce ne trebuie, dacă e bună dacă e Ministerul Adevărului sau dacă e [00:06:00] Poliția Internetului, pentru că în 2025 aflăm că ne-a spus Ancomu.[00:06:04] [00:06:05] Toată lumea crede că Ancomu ar să fie Ministerul Adevărului sau să dea jos conținutul sau să închidă site-urile, când de fapt dacă intre pe cei de la [00:06:10] Ancomu, că i-am întrebat. Zice treaba mea este doar să mă asigur că funcționează infrastructura și instituțiile care [00:06:15] au responsabilitate exact cum ai zis, pe offline, au responsabilitate și pe [00:06:20] online.[00:06:20] Exact.[00:06:21] Valentin Jucan: Exact despre asta discutăm și CNA nu se va [00:06:25] transforma niciodată într-un astfel de cenzor pentru că ordinul de [00:06:30] eliminare, adică acel document în care noi constatăm că este un conținut ilegal care trebuie eliminat [00:06:35] de pe platformă, el nu este un ordin imperativ iar [00:06:40] platforma nu poate să facă nimic atunci când vede că este vorba de un abuz.[00:06:43] Noi trimitem către [00:06:45] platformă Arătăm și justificăm legea care prevede că acel conținut este ilegal, [00:06:50] în același timp noi notificăm Comisia Europeană. Deci dacă ne întoarcem la ideea [00:06:55] nu aceea despre violență și despre instigarea la violență, ci despre [00:07:00] principiul democrației, libertatea de exprimare, dacă ne gândim la acest element, poate CNA să [00:07:05] dea un astfel de ordin care este împotriva libertății de exprimare?[00:07:08] Nu. Poate [00:07:10] CNA să abuzeze de un astfel de ordin și să cenzureze [00:07:15] opinia politică despre care discutăm? Nu poate pentru că sunt mult prea mulți ochi [00:07:20] iar mecanismul și dacă CNR vrea să abuzeze, mecanismul nu permite [00:07:25] așa ceva, pur și simplu pentru că el a fost gândit în așa mod încât să fie mai [00:07:30] mulți privitori atunci când noi luăm o decizie, atât la nivelul momentului în care luăm decizia cât și [00:07:35] ulterior.[00:07:35] Platforma în orice moment poate să respingă, poate să ceară niște clarificări.[00:07:38] George Buhnici: Deja [00:07:40] îi băgăm în ceață, pentru că cea mai multă oameni vor un răspuns simplu la chestia ta, creatori sau pur și simplu oameni [00:07:45] care vor să posteze lucruri pe internet, vor să înțeleagă, o să stea CNR-ul geană pe [00:07:50] mine?[00:07:50] Valentin Jucan: N-avem cum să stăm geană pe voi, pentru că asta ar însemna ca eu să pot să [00:07:55] am un canal de privire către tot ceea ce înseamnă internet, ceea ce este imposibil.[00:07:59] Și atunci ce o să [00:08:00] faceți? Și atunci noi reacționăm la public. Deci trebuie să vină să sizări. Exact. Toate [00:08:05] autoritățile reacționează la public. Pentru că nu avem acea gaură a [00:08:10] cheii pe platforme. Poți să urmărezi canalul tău Este unul. În [00:08:15] schimb acel conținut nociv cel mai des îl întâlnim în [00:08:20] La periferie sau în oceanul [00:08:25] internetului.[00:08:30] [00:08:35] [00:08:40] [00:08:45] [00:08:50][00:08:52] Pentru că în ultimile [00:08:55] săptămâni noi ne-am dezvoltat o capacitate foarte rapidă de a reacționa Chiar astăzi am dat un ordin de eliminare într-o [00:09:00] oră. Deci într-o oră de la momentul la care a venit sesizarea, într-o oră noi am avut [00:09:05] redactat ordinul și transmis către platforme.[00:09:07] George Buhnici: Registrăm pe 5 martie. Poți să-mi [00:09:10] zici exact despre ce a fost vorba?[00:09:11] Valentin Jucan: Da. Da Este vorba despre[00:09:13] George Buhnici: [00:09:15] platforma[00:09:16] Valentin Jucan: TikTok și era un ordin legat de [00:09:20] promovarea unui conținut legionar fascist. Da, a fost. Și [00:09:25] ne-a fost sesizat, iar noi într oră am întocmit raportul de monitorizare. Cred că [00:09:30] puteam face și mai repede numai că eram în timpul unei alte ședințe.[00:09:33] George Buhnici: Dar cred că îl puteți să scrieți cu chat GPT dacă are [00:09:35] nevoie.[00:09:35] Valentin Jucan: O să o facem. O să o facem nu cu chat GPT, nu o [00:09:40] vă vină să credeți. Deci toată lumea își imaginează și știe CNA-ul acela. Să știți că CNA începe să [00:09:45] fie CNA pe bune, hashtag CNA pe bune, pentru că suntem pe cale de [00:09:50] a asemna cea mai mare investiție pe funduri europene, 20 de milioane de euro, care ne va da posibilitatea [00:09:55] să reacționăm mult mai repede.[00:09:56] Dar știți ce înseamnă mult mai repede? Mult mai repede înseamnă și mult mai [00:10:00] transparent.[00:10:00] George Buhnici: Pentru[00:10:01] Valentin Jucan: că în momentul în care avem, să zicem, o mie de [00:10:05] sesizări, noi am avut situații în care am avut o mie de sesizări într-o zi doar pe televiziuni. [00:10:10] În momentul în care... Tu ai un soft care [00:10:15] folosește inteligența artificială și ți le gestionează, ți le citește și ți le pune în față [00:10:20] foarte repede, ți le pune pe toate în față, nu le pune doar pe unele pe care tu ai vrea să le vezi sau n-ai [00:10:25] vrea să le vezi.[00:10:25] Dar mai mult, această investiție în tehnologizare ne dă posibilitatea [00:10:30] să ne uităm pe un cadru mult mai larg, atât în televiziuni și [00:10:35] radio-uri cât și în spectrul online. Deci să avem o capacitate de a analiza [00:10:40] mult mai corectă, nu nișată care... Poate să fie foarte [00:10:45] clar părtinitoare. Deci cu cât noi primim ca membri ai [00:10:50] Consiliului informații mult mai rapid, sintetice, [00:10:55] dar mult mai vaste ca și zone de [00:11:00] aplicabilitate a jurisprudenței, cu atât noi putem să spunem da, este [00:11:05] un subiect grav și trebuie eliminat.[00:11:07] Mie de exemplu astăzi să zicem, mi [00:11:10] se pare, nu știu m-am trezit și mi se pare un anumit subiect că, vai, este [00:11:15] groaznic de grav, dar s-ar putea să nu fie deloc așa, s-ar putea să fie o impresie a mea [00:11:20] iar acest subiectivism este cel care trebuie evitat punându-i, punând membrilor în [00:11:25] față cât mai multe informații și precise și clare, astfel încât subiectivismul emoția de moment [00:11:30] să nu afecteze decizia și prin urmare să nu ajungi să dai o decizie de acest [00:11:35] tip în mod abuziv.[00:11:36] George Buhnici: Cum a ajuns sesizarea aia la CNA despre un [00:11:40] clip pe TikTok și cum ați ajuns să răspundeți într-o oră la ea?[00:11:43] Valentin Jucan: [00:11:45] www.cna.ro, dacă intrați chiar pe prima pagină, este formularul de petiții [00:11:50] platforme internet și acolo este foarte simplu, îți dai datele, datele [00:11:55] nu sunt cele cu caractere personal, deci oricine poate să intre și nu este obligat să dea date [00:12:00] de buletin sau așa mai departe astfel încât să-i fie team, nici vorbă, nu condiționăm așa [00:12:05] ceva.[00:12:05] George Buhnici: Asterisc, aveți un mecanism de protecție antispam atunci pentru că s-ar putea să primiți niște [00:12:10] fladuri?[00:12:10] Valentin Jucan: Nu, avem,[00:12:11] George Buhnici: avem[00:12:12] Valentin Jucan: ni s-a întâmplat pe o altă adresă pe un alt formular dar [00:12:15] avem pe formularele acestea nu putem fi blocați. [00:12:20] Intri, dai link-ul prin screen dacă poți, dacă ești dispus să contribui și să [00:12:25] ne dai niște explicații mai clare, după care el este văzut automat de colegii de la [00:12:30] direcția de monitorizare și ajung la noi implicit, [00:12:35] membrii Consiliului pentru că trebuie să existe o...[00:12:38] Un fel de filtru [00:12:40] este sau nu este urgent. Poate să fie o sesizare pe platformă, dar ori să nu se [00:12:45] susțină sesizarea respectivă, ori să fie ceva care [00:12:50] poate să aștepte până săptămâna viitoare. Dar când discutăm despre elemente [00:12:55] de conținut ilegal de acest tip, așa cum spuneam... De este ilegal să promovezi [00:13:00] fascismul în România?[00:13:00] E suficient să deschidem codul penal, pentru că există legi în codul penal, [00:13:05] atât codul penal cât și legi speciale care interzic foarte clar promovarea [00:13:10] regimilor totalitare fasciste și a regimilor care sunt declarate ca fiind [00:13:15] ilegale. Asta[00:13:16] George Buhnici: până când vom rescrie istoria.[00:13:18] Valentin Jucan: Să sperăm că nu [00:13:20] o rescriem. Aici este misiunea Ministerului Educației și a profesorului de nu Acum [00:13:25] parafrazam[00:13:25] George Buhnici: niște chestii pe care le-am auzit, plus că ar mai fi...[00:13:29] Și problema [00:13:30] asta legată de faptul că atunci când vezi ceva pe internet, celălalt poate să [00:13:35] zică oricând, păi da dar am și eu dreptul la opinie.[00:13:37] Valentin Jucan: Așa este, la fel și prostia este [00:13:40] gratis. E gratis și este constituțională. Și atunci dacă [00:13:45] n-am[00:13:45] George Buhnici: dreptul să fiu prost și să zic că fascismul mi se pare interesant?[00:13:48] Ba da, dar îți strici [00:13:50] întâlnirea. Îți strici? Asta e o întâlnire, dar încalc legea? Păi[00:13:54] Valentin Jucan: nu. [00:13:55] Trebuie să te informezi. Acum este o foarte mare [00:14:00] confuzie și a fost făcută în mod voit. Dacă eu spun acum, eu cred că [00:14:05] Hitler nu știu ce și spun doar eu cred că, asta nu este [00:14:10] opinie Această împachetare semantică nu înseamnă că eu [00:14:15] exprim o opinie.[00:14:16] Trebuie foarte, și noi tot mai mult dorim să facem acest [00:14:20] lucru, să explicăm românilor care este diferența între opinie și afirmație. Opinia este ceva intim, [00:14:25] este ceva ce nu poate fi verificat. Îmi place apa rece, nu o să poți niciodată să verifici acest [00:14:30] lucru, este o opinie. Dar în momentul în care spun că apa aceasta este [00:14:35] infectată nu este suficient să se transforme în opinie.[00:14:39] Eu cred că apa [00:14:40] este... Ea conține afirmația în sine, este infectată și pot [00:14:45] să verific. Deci atunci când avem de a face cu o afirmație [00:14:50] știm că o putem verifica. Matematic, fizic, oricum o putem verifica. [00:14:55] Aceea este o afirmație și aceea este ceea ce atrage [00:15:00] răspunderea. Degeaba spun eu eu cred că Hitler a fost nu știu cum, a fost bun, rău sau nu.[00:15:05][00:15:05] Avem fapte verificabile pe care trebuie să le respectăm ca [00:15:10] atare.[00:15:10] George Buhnici: Revenim la IGDLCC în dată ce-ți spun despre sponsorul nostru, Darkom Energy, [00:15:15] cei care ne garantează că nu ni se sting luminile din studio, adică nu avem [00:15:20] niciodată pene de curent. Panourile fotovoltaice, invertoarele și bateriile sunt [00:15:25] inima sistemului nostru energetic și cred cu tărie că sunt investiții importante, [00:15:30] dar și rentabile.[00:15:31] Cu acest sistem am economisit deja mii euro la facturi [00:15:35] Dar și mai important, avem electricitatea garantată fără fluctuații care ne pot defecta [00:15:40] electricele și electronicele. Dacă ai în plan să construiești, să renovezi [00:15:45] orice fel de clădire, inclusiv industrială, alege o soluție solidă de [00:15:50] generare și stocare de energie.[00:15:51] Noi colaborăm cu echipa Adarcom Energy și îi [00:15:55] recomandăm. Bine atunci pot să spun, eu cred că puncte puncte lider istoric [00:16:00] documentat ca fiind așa dictator, a avut și părți bune?[00:16:04] Valentin Jucan: [00:16:05] Da, dar părți bune sau părți rele, astea nu înseamnă că îi [00:16:10] scuză regimul și că, dacă spun eu, cred că a avut și părți bune, brusc se [00:16:15] pune o paranteză la lege.[00:16:16] Nu se pune o paranteză la lege, [00:16:20] regimul fascist, promovarea lui este ilegală. [00:16:25] Dar și comentarea lui? Putem să comentăm, dar hai să comentăm corect. Și hai să comentăm complet. [00:16:30][00:16:30] George Buhnici: Aici e nuanța, pentru că pe internet foarte mulți dintre colegii mei... [00:16:35] Iartă-mă, hai să venim un[00:16:35] Valentin Jucan: pic mai aproape aici în[00:16:36] George Buhnici: țară la comunism.[00:16:37] Ok.[00:16:38] Valentin Jucan: Același lucru.[00:16:39] George Buhnici: [00:16:40] Perfect. Ceaușescu a făcut și lucruri bune.[00:16:41] Valentin Jucan: Ok.[00:16:43] George Buhnici: Am voie să zic asta pe[00:16:44] Valentin Jucan: internet? Da, ai [00:16:45] voie să zici asta pe internet, dar dacă ai în studio pe cineva care spune asta, [00:16:50] obligatoriu trebuie pus lângă și ce n-a făcut bine. Pentru că de ce aceste regimuri au devenit [00:16:55] criminale? Pentru că în cea mai mare proporție activității lor de fapt au făcut [00:17:00] rău.[00:17:00] De aceea sunt considerate regimuri criminale. Ele sunt considerate [00:17:05] regimuri criminale pentru că asta au făcut în majoritatea existenței lor Nu pentru că din când în când [00:17:10] au făcut și ceva bine. Au construit... Tot aud. Dom'le au construit [00:17:15] fabrici Așa, au construit fabrici Perfect. Hai să luăm datele să vedem care [00:17:20] era adevăratul export al României, către care țări de mâna treia era, dacă exista [00:17:25] competitivitate, dacă exista calitate.[00:17:27] Dacă spun s-au construit fabrici și [00:17:30] uzine, s-au construit, dar este adevărul complet? [00:17:35] Ceaușescu a făcut și lucruri bune? Probabil. Poate că găsim două-trei dar în [00:17:40] majoritatea perioadei cât noi am avut comunism în țară... Dar[00:17:43] George Buhnici: uite, sunt mulți care o să spună [00:17:45] dar nu o să mai facă nimeni ce a făcut, uite-te la Palatul Parlamentului.[00:17:47] Este[00:17:48] Valentin Jucan: inutil Este o [00:17:50] construcție inutilă, am lucrat acolo, vin de acolo, este o construcție realmente este [00:17:55] o construcție inutilă este o construcție abjectă din punct de vedere [00:18:00] arhitectural și a utilizării spațiilor de acolo. Este inutilă, [00:18:05] costurile sunt incredibil de mari pe care noi le plătim acum, [00:18:10] dar când trecem pe acolo ne uităm la Palatul Parlamentului și [00:18:15] stăm ca niște buhe și spunem vai cât mare este, dar atât, el este doar [00:18:20] mare, este o reprezentare a unui...[00:18:23] Da, canalul Dunăre-Marea [00:18:25] Neagră sau drumuri și poduri, blocuri, chestii adică... Dar câți oameni au murit? Exact. Perfect, [00:18:30] câți oameni au murit ca să se facă canalul Dunăre-Marea Neagră? Asta nu mai spunem. Asta nu mai [00:18:35] spunem și câți oameni au fost arestați politic și duși pentru ca canalul [00:18:40] Dunăre-Marea Neagră să fie construit?[00:18:41] Deci acestea sunt elementele -au pierdut casele și[00:18:44] George Buhnici: câte biserici s-au [00:18:45] nivelat pentru a apărea acea casa poporului, dar... Atunci când intri într-o astfel de [00:18:50] discuție, este ușor să te duci în stânga sau în dreapta. Pe mine ce mă interesează în toată povestea asta este că [00:18:55] noi avem o dezbatere și suntem bine intenționați.[00:18:58] Dar sunt foarte mulți actori, [00:19:00] să le zicem așa, dacă putem să le zicem, puțin forțat creatori, care vor face [00:19:05] acest whataboutism, cum îi zicem noi pe internet. Adică da, dar a avut și părți mâne. Da, dar. [00:19:10] Adică avem... Da, dar de ce anulăm această bucată din istorie, care este partea [00:19:15] din istoria noastră? Sau uite am avut lideri care au făcut chestii.[00:19:18] Și avem acest cum [00:19:20] îi spun, relativism. Dar evit să vorbesc în denumiri din astea științifice. Încerc să explic [00:19:25] pentru cei care se uită la noi, că dacă ai de gând să vorbești pe internet despre lucrurile astea, în ce condiții [00:19:30] o să vină sau nu ce ne-au după tine?[00:19:32] Valentin Jucan: Noi aici avem o [00:19:35] dezbatere. Repet, ar trebui să ne uităm din nou la conținutul ilegal despre care vorbesc [00:19:40] Incitare la ură.[00:19:41] Deci[00:19:41] George Buhnici: plecăm de[00:19:41] Valentin Jucan: la[00:19:41] George Buhnici: astea. În primul rând ce-i penal?[00:19:43] Valentin Jucan: Bineînțeles, incitare la [00:19:45] ură.[00:19:45] George Buhnici: Ce înseamnă incitare la ură? Faci pic de educație de bază pentru creatori?[00:19:48] Valentin Jucan: Da, da nu vreau să ți se tai canalul după aceea, [00:19:50] că sigur o să fie sesizat fix pe episodul ăsta dacă... [00:19:55] Asta ar fi cel mai fain. Știi cea A venit ce ne-a auzit după [00:20:00] care s-a autosizat după ce a ieșit pe ușă.[00:20:03] Conform legii. Conform [00:20:05] legii, da. Dar incitare la ură trebuie să fie o incitare [00:20:10] în sensul explicit, De a îndemna și chiar de a sugera [00:20:15] până la îndemnul propriu zis împotriva unor categorii sociale [00:20:20] sau orientări sexuale sau minorități și așa mai departe. Instigare la ură [00:20:25] și punerea în paralel sau în balanță, mai bine zis, a [00:20:30] faptului că unii nu merită ceva.[00:20:32] E doar un exemplu o incitare la ură și [00:20:35] atunci creezi un sentiment de ură împotriva cuiva sau împotriva unora.[00:20:39] George Buhnici: [00:20:40] Poți să dăm un exemplu, da, moarte ălora sau afară cu ea din țară.[00:20:44] Valentin Jucan: Exact, [00:20:45] am avut temele acestea afară cu frații noștri din Transilvania, afară cu ei [00:20:50] din țară. Da, este incitare la ură, clar.[00:20:52] Incitare la violență, nu doar că îi scoatem din [00:20:55] țară, îi și ajutăm și acum venim și luăm [00:21:00] oferta de la Lidl, dacă e săptămâna germană punem mâna și pe coasă. [00:21:05] Este incitare la violență E promoție[00:21:07] George Buhnici: săptămâna asta la foarfecă.[00:21:08] Valentin Jucan: E. Este incitare [00:21:10] la violență pentru că nu doar incit la ură, dar vin și pun după aceea și o [00:21:15] fac în mod explicit spunând că dacă nu ies ei de bună voie, s-ar putea să acționez eu.[00:21:20][00:21:20] Și aici nu discutăm despre o incitare la ură împotriva doar [00:21:25] unei persoane, ci inclusiv împotriva instituțiilor statului care sunt chemate [00:21:30] să vegeze la respectarea legii. E Avem acțiuni de [00:21:35] terorism care sunt foarte clare, aici este un regulament totuși puțin [00:21:40] separat, dar există și acest foarte clar conținut ilegal.[00:21:43] Discutăm despre pornografie [00:21:45] infantilă, discutăm despre instigare. E. [00:21:50] Un element foarte important, dezinformarea care nu la modul unei [00:21:55] dezinformări scăpate într-o discuție, ci dezinformarea care are ca scop [00:22:00] afectarea ordinii constituționale. E exemplu... [00:22:05] Vine cineva și anunță într-o filmare că președintele [00:22:10] României tocmai a semnat ordinul de [00:22:15] mobilizare și a declarat război Ucrainei.[00:22:20][00:22:22] Iar pentru asta noi trebuie să [00:22:25] ieșim în stradă, trebuie să luăm guvernul pe sus și să răsturnăm guvernul. [00:22:30] Este 100% încadrat aici. Sau [00:22:35] poate să fie un alt exemplu care, da, cred că n-ar trebui să-l dau fiindcă suntem prea în zona legilor [00:22:40] prezidențiale. Ceea ce am spus mai înainte este cât se poate de corect.[00:22:44] Acesta este [00:22:45] conținutul ilegal despre care discutăm și doar acesta este conținutul care poate fi [00:22:50] eliminat și trebuie să fie eliminat de pe platforme. Nu discutăm despre opinii.[00:22:54] George Buhnici: La [00:22:55] de-ajust TikTok-ul? Asta e o întrebare, pentru că din câte aud [00:23:00] eu Și am auzit, pe exemplu inclusiv pe un reprezentant La autorități electorale permanente Care [00:23:05] monitorizează platformele Pentru publicitatea electorală Breaking[00:23:07] Valentin Jucan: news, conținut eliminat în 40 de minute [00:23:10] De la momentul la care noi l-am dat Asta[00:23:11] George Buhnici: e un record, exact ce v-am să[00:23:12] Valentin Jucan: zic Deci noi am dat ordinul de eliminare [00:23:15] Într-o oră Și TikTok [00:23:20] A eliminat în 40 de minute[00:23:21] George Buhnici: După ce a primit de la CNA Da,[00:23:24] Valentin Jucan: deci de [00:23:25] la momentul la care Noi am dat ordinul, conținut eliminat În 40 de minute, am primit mesajul La 5 [00:23:30] și 11 Foarte tare, deci Deci funcționează [00:23:35] A[00:23:35] George Buhnici: început să funcționeze A început să funcționeze Pentru că în 2024 [00:23:40] Din ce aud eu A zis cineva cu subiect și [00:23:45] predicat Din autoritatea electorală permanentă Sesizări trimise clar pentru publicitatea electorală [00:23:50] Nemarcată la TikTok Au fost date jos după 10 zile Așa este [00:23:55] Așa este.[00:23:56] Deci în sfârșit la TikTok se mișcă ceva. Da. Doamne aștept. [00:24:00] Așa este. Deci cam asta este lanțul. Dacă aveți ne lămuri așadar dacă ce aveți [00:24:05] de gând să spuneți încalcă cumva codul penal, la asta se[00:24:08] Valentin Jucan: întâmplă foarte repede. Și [00:24:10] de unde știu oamenii care ne ascultă dacă încalcă codul penal sau nu?[00:24:13] George Buhnici: Păi cred că înainte să spui chestii [00:24:15] extraordinare ar trebui să îți iei măsuri extraordinare.[00:24:19] E ca [00:24:20] la judecată. Vrei să faci acuzații extraordinare? Trebuie[00:24:23] Valentin Jucan: să ai dovezi extraordinare Dar [00:24:25] oamenii care ne ascultă se bazează pe instituțiile statului, ca cea pe care o [00:24:30] reprezint. Da. Oamenii n-au vreme, oamenii sunt ocupați cu munca de zi zi Ei [00:24:35] n-au timp să se gândească ce face CNAU, ce face AEPU, ce face nu știu cine, ce face...[00:24:39] Ok. [00:24:40] Și atunci cum facem? Hai să-i rugăm. Hai să-i rugăm. [00:24:45] Să-și pună... Atunci când deschid de dimineață... [00:24:50] Platforma oricare ar fi. De preferat[00:24:53] George Buhnici: după ce s-au spălat pe dinți.[00:24:55][00:24:57] Unii dintre noi verifică telefonul [00:25:00] după ce au deschis ochii, ceea e nasol pentru neuroni. Mai departe. Ok. [00:25:05][00:25:06] Valentin Jucan: Doamne deci mă provoșlă, dar în fine. Pentru[00:25:09] George Buhnici: [00:25:10] că nu gândim.[00:25:10] Valentin Jucan: Facem chestia[00:25:11] George Buhnici: asta, suntem pe pilot automat.[00:25:12] Valentin Jucan: Ideea este, hai să ne întrebăm, mă oare e [00:25:15] așa Deci vezi o știre, vezi orice. [00:25:20] Un lucru foarte clar, Facebook, Instagram, toate astea nu sunt surse de informare.[00:25:24] [00:25:25] Nu sunt surse de informare, nu este un ziar. Facebook nu este ziar, [00:25:30] că tu vezi din când în când acolo cât mai apare New York Times, CNN, dacă tu i-ai dat follow [00:25:35] la chestii. Asta este altceva, dar platformele sociale sunt pentru a socializa, [00:25:40] pentru a fi între noi, a bârfi. Nu este sursă de informare asta este [00:25:45] greșala fundamentală, pentru că oamenii au început să se seteze și să [00:25:50] existe.[00:25:50] În funcție de platforme ceea este o nebunie totală și atunci ceea ce [00:25:55] încercăm și o vom face mult mai clar și mai vizibil este să transmitem [00:26:00] românilor ceea exact fac și alte autorități din Europa. Oameni buni întrebați-vă [00:26:05] oare este așa? Oare e așa? Văd un lucru. [00:26:10] De atâtea ori tu ai prezentat niște gadget-uri și știi că povesteam și [00:26:15] oamenii te urmăresc tocmai pentru a vedea o diversitate, pentru a obține niște [00:26:20] informații și a lua o decizie în legătură cu un dispozitiv Oare de ce nu facem [00:26:25] același lucru și atunci când vine vorba despre decizia care mi-a afectează ziua de [00:26:30] mâine sau familia sau viitorul?[00:26:33] Sau bugetul meu afectat [00:26:35] de bugetul național? Poate chiar democrația din această țară pentru care am [00:26:40] luptat ca niște disperați? De ce nu ne gândim la elementele astea? Oare [00:26:45] este așa? Oare chiar există tuneluri pe sub bucegi? Uite [00:26:50] ăsta este un exemplu care, cum spuneam mai înainte, poate să strice o întâlnire [00:26:55] foarte mișto.[00:26:56] Deci pe bune, oameni buni, vine un [00:27:00] tânăr și ei pentru prima dată au intrat pe Tinder, așa se așează, ia un vin, dar [00:27:05] n-are el de vin și de asta. La crema lui Ovidiu, am văzut că merge. Cum? Nu, nu, nu. [00:27:10] Ia eticheta și spune vin cu gust, pluta nu știu cum, [00:27:15] scoarță așa mai departe gust așa mai departe și începe ăsta și vorbește despre tunelurile de [00:27:20] sub bucegi.[00:27:20] Păi fata aia de acolo, în următoarele 10 minute a plecat. Mă [00:27:25] înainte să cași gura și să-ți strici o, mai ales acum de dragobete, numai bine te [00:27:30] gândești. Bine s-ar putea să existe surpriza ca în fața lui să fie o tipă care să spună [00:27:35] și nu există mă așa ceva, pentru că pământul e plat.[00:27:40][00:27:40] George Buhnici: Sunt șanse mari însă ca ăia doi să fie investiți [00:27:45] și la Nordis. Pentru că nu scapă nimeni, nu vorbim [00:27:50] doar de cei care cred în tunelurile Dacii ce s-au pământul plat, sunt și oameni inclusiv cu educație, cu facultăți, [00:27:55] care și-au băgat banii în niște chestii despre care nu s-au documentat destul. Și da, dacă funcționează în România ar să [00:28:00] funcționeze legal.[00:28:00] Valentin Jucan: Aceea este o înșelătorie... Sofisticată. Este[00:28:03] George Buhnici: sofisticată, dar... Însă în[00:28:04] Valentin Jucan: [00:28:05] momentul în care vezi un carton cu un cal din pâine și tu dai scrii de desubt, fă ce [00:28:10] tare, Doamne ajută. Nu, nu stai puțin. Dute și ia-ți la Nordis atunci.[00:28:13] George Buhnici: Bunica a făcut acest [00:28:15] cal frumos și nimeni nu-l apreciează.[00:28:17] Valentin Jucan: Exact, exact.[00:28:18] George Buhnici: Dar eu vorbesc despre cei care au [00:28:20] investit în 2024 la Nordis, pentru că erau știri clare și tot [00:28:25] felul de oameni care se plângeau în legătură cu asta.[00:28:27] Adică să mă investești într-o chestie cu atât de multe semne de [00:28:30] întrebare, iarăși eu mă duc la extrema cealaltă Nu este ferit nimeni de [00:28:35] păcăleală dezinformare sau... Avem și disinformation și avem și [00:28:40] misinformation, nu? Și malinformation. Mai avem unul acum?[00:28:43] Valentin Jucan: Mis, dis, mal. Astea sunt întotdeauna [00:28:45][00:28:45] George Buhnici: A, și mal-information?[00:28:46] Ce-i[00:28:47] Valentin Jucan: asta? Mal-information, noi nu prea [00:28:50] l-am tradus, nu pentru că l-am vrut, ci pentru că, din punct de vederea [00:28:55] definițiilor românești pentru dezinformare și pentru disinformation și misinformation, [00:29:00] noi cam le-am inclus, acest mal-information, care are o cu totul altă intenție [00:29:05] și are o altă componentă. Ok.[00:29:07] George Buhnici: Acum trebuie să pun un asterism. Nu vreau să-mi furi pe [00:29:10] nimeni. Sunt mulți oameni care și-au pierdut economiile la Nordis. Așa e, da. Nu dau vina pe victimă. [00:29:15] Nu corect Nu dau vina pe victimă. Spun doar că, înainte să-ți pui [00:29:20] economiile în orice chestie Trebuie să-ți faci un due diligence, să [00:29:25] verifici cât poți de bine.[00:29:26] Și mă întorc la ce spuneai. Inclusiv pe partea de știri. Da, într-adevăr suntem mult [00:29:30] mai dispuși să vedem 14 review-uri în medie de gadget înainte [00:29:35] să-l cumpărăm, dar luăm de cele mai multe ori știrile așa cum vin. Pentru că ni se pare că dacă a zis-o ăla [00:29:40] și a mai preluat-o ăla la tu și a dat-o în share, începe să aibă un miros de credibilitate.[00:29:43] Și mai ales dacă sună [00:29:45] bine, nu trebuie să fie neapărat adevărat. Dacă îmi place cum sună, s-ar putea să o mușc.[00:29:49] Valentin Jucan: Aici mai este un [00:29:50] adevăr care trebuie spus. Românii sunt deja... Nu o spun eu ca și când am [00:29:55] descoperit apa. Dar românii sunt teribil de dezamăgiți de modul în care [00:30:00] comunică instituțiile. Adică nu comunică.[00:30:03] Dacă trebuie să explici [00:30:05] românilor de o mie de ori de ce nu știu, de ce este nociv [00:30:10] ceva, trebuie să faci de 10.000 de ori. Și dacă este totul să ne gândim, [00:30:15] hai să facem un exercițiu împreună să ne gândim cât costă o zi de democrație, [00:30:20] Care este costul Cât ar costa dacă ar fi să punem pe hârtie democrația noastră asta la 30 [00:30:25] ceva de ani?[00:30:25] Cât ar costa? Ar fi o sumă care ne-ar șoca, dar ar fi o [00:30:30] sumă care ne-ar da reperul [00:30:35] costurilor pe care noi ar trebui să le băgăm în protecția democrației. Asta înseamnă educație, școală [00:30:40] prevenție. Nu este deloc noi acum ca [00:30:45] autorități funcționăm în stil pompieristic, încercăm să prevenim un foc îl vedem iese fum, [00:30:50] un incendiu a fost stins, aproape că ne este clar că s-ar [00:30:55] putea, deci suntem în continuu cu casca și...[00:30:58] Societatea are [00:31:00] nevoie să-și creeze anticorpi iar rolul statului român nu este acela [00:31:05] de a fi big brother și de a acționa în continuu punitiv, ci [00:31:10] tocmai de a ajuta societatea să aibă anticorpi. Aceea este o societate [00:31:15] normală și puternică în care [00:31:20] valul acesta de dezinformări este lăsat undeva deoparte pentru că totuși ai un nivel de [00:31:25] educație destul de ridicat.[00:31:25] Gândiți-vă că francezii fac educație media din 1980, [00:31:30] nici nu se gândea cineva la zona de internet și îi fac educație media, nici mă gândesc la țările [00:31:35] nordice. Care au cu totul și cu totul altă structură decât noi.[00:31:38] George Buhnici: Dar[00:31:39] Valentin Jucan: vorbim despre [00:31:40] francezi, care sunt un popor latin suntem francofon. [00:31:45] Fiecare zonă a Europei este influențată de istorie și chiar de zona în care [00:31:50] se află.[00:31:51] Popoarele nordice sunt mult mai riguroase pentru că [00:31:55] selecția naturală a fost acolo de așa natură încât să îi împingă la astfel de [00:32:00] comportamente de selecție și de rigoare.[00:32:02] George Buhnici: Zi-o mai pe șleau. De ce sunt nordicii [00:32:05] atât de preocupați de comunicare și de media și noi nu avem cursuri de așa ceva [00:32:10] în școli?[00:32:10] Valentin Jucan: Un exemplu a modului în care văd ei societatea este că [00:32:15] dacă rămâi peste program la muncă, nu ești bine văzut deloc.[00:32:18] Deci acolo nu este că a rămas [00:32:20] peste program și lucrează în plus. Nu. Ministerul muncii în Finlanda, acesta [00:32:25] este cazul din Finlanda, ministerul muncii nu apreciază aceste excese pentru că ei [00:32:30] se gândesc ce se întâmplă după Vă mulțumesc pentru Cu familia ta. Tu rămâi mai mult la [00:32:35] muncă, îți neglijezi familia, neglijezi timpul petrecut cu familia, [00:32:40] începi să ai neplăceri acasă te culci probabil mai [00:32:45] târziu iar a doua zi vii obosit și nu dai randamentul care trebuie.[00:32:48] Aceasta este logica [00:32:50] și atunci este important să ofere toate condițiile pentru ca tu să ai un randament [00:32:55] foarte bun în intervalul orar alocat muncii. [00:33:00] Dar acestea sunt comportamente care vin din urmă [00:33:05] vin ca un reflex, ca o oglindire, ca o reflexie a [00:33:10] istoricului națiunii respective. Noi dacă ne uităm în Constituție în Constituție spune, la un moment dat [00:33:15] vorbește și spune în spiritul democrației românești, spiritul [00:33:20] democrației românești sugerează că noi am avut cândva o lungă democrație și noi nu am avut [00:33:25] Cândva o lungă democrație.[00:33:26] Noi acum ne consolidăm democrația, deci acum [00:33:30] noi suntem în fața momentului în care ne creăm acești anticorpi [00:33:35] și anticorpii aceștia nu sunt pentru alegerile următoare, sunt pentru generațiile următoare. [00:33:40] Deci investiția trebuie să fie pe măsură. Niciodată un cost în educație nu va fi [00:33:45] prea mare. Niciodată.[00:33:50] [00:33:55] [00:34:00] [00:34:05] [00:34:10] [00:34:15] [00:34:20][00:34:20] Adică exact materia. Care ar trebui să fie [00:34:25] predată școli educație media, educație media însemnând nu cum se scrie o știre și [00:34:30] ce facem cu o informație. Asta înseamnă educație media. Ce fac cu o informație Exact [00:34:35] asta noi nu o predăm în școli. Noi nu spunem oameni nu spunem[00:34:38] George Buhnici: [00:34:40] copilor [00:34:45] [00:34:50] [00:34:55] [00:35:00] [00:35:05] noștri. Cred eu deja după un an, doi au o facultate în [00:35:10] ecrane.[00:35:10] Valentin Jucan: Păi ăsta este motivul această educație la locul de muncă, [00:35:15] ăsta este motivul și pentru care în funcție de subiectul zilei, suntem istorici, mâine suntem [00:35:20] avocați, poi mâine suntem ingineri. Păi e greșit. Da, e greșit, pentru că este foarte [00:35:25] important să știi că nu ai expertiză într-un domeniu. E important să știi că nu știi.[00:35:29] [00:35:30] Da, e important să știi că nu știi, pentru că ăla este momentul în care tu te apuci și scrii pe [00:35:35] platformă. Trebuie să-ți asumi, s-a întâmplat un accident aviatic, nu domnule, îți spun eu cum a [00:35:40] fost îmi spune mie ăla. Eu care acum două zile nu [00:35:45] făceam nimica, sunt perfect conștient de procedurile de aterizare și de decolare.[00:35:49] [00:35:50] Deci este foarte important, și asta ține de nivelul de educație, este foarte important [00:35:55] să-ți asumi că nu ești un cunoscător al domeniului mai ales în zonele acestea tehnice, [00:36:00] juridice, toată lumea știe drept. Toată lumea știe dar nu în trecutul Dar toți avem dreptul la opinie [00:36:05] Așa este, dar opinia mea nu trebuie să fie [00:36:10] însângerată de opinia ta pe Facebook și să ne apucăm să ne înjurăm și să ne apucăm să ne [00:36:15] amenințăm, pentru că aici nu mai este vorba deja despre un debate, debate-ul este, [00:36:20] dezbaterea este extrem de sănătoasă dar este un debate atunci când eu îți [00:36:25] ascult opiniile și sunt totuși rezonabil și am acea doză de [00:36:30] acceptabilitate că s-ar putea să nu am dreptate.[00:36:32] Și s-ar putea ca tu să ai niște elemente care [00:36:35] să modifice mie punctul de vedere. Asta fac doi oameni care sunt măcar [00:36:40] calmi.[00:36:40] George Buhnici: Noi acum predicăm în fața corului Cei mai mulți oameni care au rezistat deja jumătate de oră la [00:36:45] discuția noastră înțeleg lucrurile astea și le iau ca niște fundamente ale [00:36:50] comunicării pe internet.[00:36:50] Ei înțeleg că pe internet nu poți să iei exact ce-ți vine de-a gata. [00:36:55] Cu toate astea, spuneam mai devreme că rețele sociale sunt doar pentru socializare. S-ar putea ca [00:37:00] unii să zică, bă, stai un pic, că nu prea am încredere în instituții pentru că m-au [00:37:05] dezamăgit, nu prea am încredere nici în presă pentru că și presa m-a dezamăgit, [00:37:10] avem exemplu cu Duiumu, și atunci o să-mi caut adevărul la cei care sunt în [00:37:15] stare să-l mai spună.[00:37:15] Unde ar trebui să comunice oamenii ăia care vor să spună adevărul? [00:37:20] Dacă nu, pe Facebook. Pentru că, uite spre exemplu pe Facebook sunt și [00:37:25] oameni cu facultate cu educație profesori universitari. Când scrie papahagii pe Facebook, eu chiar [00:37:30] citesc și chiar cred.[00:37:32] Valentin Jucan: Deci te-a dezamăgit Mercedes-ul, [00:37:35] te-a dezamăgit Volkswagen-ul, de Tesla nici nu se mai pune problema, hai să luăm [00:37:40] Măgaru.[00:37:44] [00:37:45] Nu sau cum? Eu înțeleg lucrul [00:37:50] acesta, dar tutuși... Ai niște instituții care te reprezintă, [00:37:55] ele sunt vremennic conduse de niște oameni. Nu [00:38:00] poți totuși să abdici și să renunți la, nu la avea încredere, la [00:38:05] avea așteptări. Eu cel puțin eu cel puțin ca [00:38:10] reprezentant, ocupant vremennic a poziției pe care o am în CNA, eu nu [00:38:15] doresc acum, brusc, ca cei care ne ascultă acum să, gata, am încredere în [00:38:20] CNA.[00:38:20] Nu, mi-aș dori să nu renunțe la această [00:38:25] speranță, că totuși poate CNA s-ar putea să [00:38:30] facă ceva. Pentru că și pentru mine ca autoritate [00:38:35] contează, și aici chiar mă refer la CNA, contează foarte mult când văd [00:38:40] că există niște reacții pozitive atunci când și noi reușim să ne mișcăm mult, [00:38:45] mult mai bine și mai rapid.[00:38:46] Contează. Contează pentru, de exemplu pentru cei 14 oameni [00:38:50] 14 avem la monitorizare.[00:38:53] George Buhnici: 14 oameni?[00:38:54] Valentin Jucan: Da 14 [00:38:55] oameni. Cu acești 14 oameni și cu câțiva inspectori din teritoriu noi am [00:39:00] reușit să ne mobilizăm în perioada asta în acest mod.[00:39:02] George Buhnici: Eu bag mâna în foc românii postează mai mult de 14 [00:39:05] postări pe secundă.[00:39:06] Valentin Jucan: Știu, sunt de acord.[00:39:08] Acum o paranteză și [00:39:10] nu vreau să divagez de la subiect. Un ordin de eliminare nu înseamnă o postare. Noi într-un ordin de [00:39:15] eliminare putem să punem sute. Dar trebuie să le vadă cineva. Și bineînțeles, bineînțeles. [00:39:20] Deci contează foarte mult ca românii să [00:39:25] nu renunțe la această așteptare. Pentru că ajungem atunci să ne refugiem în [00:39:30] cea mai nocivă zonă.[00:39:32] Exact de acolo, acea zonă care cu [00:39:35] siguranță întotdeauna te va dezamăgi. Întotdeauna te va dezamăgi. [00:39:40] Pentru că niciodată nu vei găsi rezolvarea problemei tale [00:39:45] de sănătate pe Facebook. Niciodată. Știu. [00:39:50] Știu Deci nu mă luau cu creme. Nu. După. [00:39:55] Sau cu tratamentele de... nu. Ginkgo biloba? Deci te [00:40:00] duci la medic. Nu ți se rezolv problemele financiare pe internet.[00:40:04] Că îți facă ea [00:40:05] un phishing de ți le-ai rezolvat complex și nu mai ai de ce să-ți bați capul. [00:40:10] Nu te duci, nu te refugiezi în acea zonă care este atât de vulnerabilă și în care [00:40:15] evident că există acest foarte mare risc de [00:40:20] a te compromite ca persoană, de a-ți compromite datele personale de a-ți compromite...[00:40:25][00:40:29] [00:40:30] În continuu Deci nu știu lucrurile astea. Știu doar cei care poate se uită, dar [00:40:35] românii nu știu lucrurile astea. Eu nu vorbesc cu toți românii[00:40:38] George Buhnici: Mi-ar plăcea să vorbesc cu mai mulți dar [00:40:40] nu vorbesc chiar cu toți românii. Deci hai să nu predicăm în fața corului, hai să fim un pic aplicați, să uităm mulți creatorii la ce fac [00:40:45] eu aici și mulți dintre ei să gândesc, ok, să vedem cum fac să nu intru pe contrasens cu CNA-ul ăsta, care mai nou se uită și [00:40:50] pe internet, își bag ăștia și ei pe acolo și o fie mult mai geană pe noi.[00:40:55][00:40:59] Valentin Jucan: [00:41:00] Putem să ne întâlnim oriunde. Și ne faceți workshop? Și facem împreună, nu-și predă nimeni la [00:41:05] nimeni. Luăm cadrul legal și explicăm ne [00:41:10] explicăm unii altora, noi explicăm uite ce suntem obligați să [00:41:15] facem, uite cum facem, uite cum am făcut până acum, spuneți-ne dacă ați înțeles și voi [00:41:20] același lucru din acest regulament european și dacă vedeți [00:41:25] undeva o problemă atunci când vine vorba de criteriile Pe care le aplic în...[00:41:30][00:41:30] Asta ar fi o chestie foarte bună. Am văzut foarte mulți creatori de conținut pe [00:41:35] zona aceasta de online care se speriau așa și dădeau alarmist, dom'le, să [00:41:40] vezi ce o facă CNA-ul, ce... Big Brother, legăci zorie. Nici vorba de așa ceva.[00:41:44] George Buhnici: [00:41:45] Bun, deci trebuie să ne vedem și să povestim, dar trebuie să avem și un cadru pentru chestia asta și [00:41:50] încât te aud va trebui să mă înregistrezi la CNA.[00:41:52] Valentin Jucan: Da, dar înregistrarea asta la CNA... înseamnă să mă înregistrezi? E [00:41:55] notificare. Salut, sunt George, sunt și eu aici pe www.atat.[00:41:59] George Buhnici: După ce mă [00:42:00] notific acolo, crezi că îmi răspundești de la administrația prezidențială că am vrut să mă acreditez și [00:42:05] nu apare acolo, că nu acceptă decât ziare, radio-uri și televiziuni.[00:42:09] A[00:42:09] Valentin Jucan: e. [00:42:10][00:42:10] George Buhnici: Păi și cum fac? Nu știu. Nu pot eu să[00:42:12] Valentin Jucan: răspund în [00:42:15] locul administrației prezidențiale.[00:42:17] George Buhnici: Uite eu, dacă mă audă cineva de la administrația prezidențială, [00:42:20] eu am cerut celor de la X să-i pună bifă gri lui Bolojan. Nu vor să-i pună bifă gri. Pe [00:42:25] interimar. Nu contează e președintele senatului, este parte din...[00:42:30][00:42:31] Adică pui la oficialități pui mai ales când reprezintă statul. [00:42:35] O să-i[00:42:35] Valentin Jucan: pună...[00:42:36] George Buhnici: Nu știu cu eu să-i pună. Să vedem cu ei pun. [00:42:40] Cineva o să aibă.[00:42:41] Valentin Jucan: Dar nu e... Și dacă câștigă cealaltă, îi pune [00:42:45] bifăroșie? Le pune la toți. Dar bifa de acum e albastră, nu? Nu, e gri. E gri. Ca să nu fie [00:42:50] nicio... A, ca să n-aibă nicio... Am înțeles.[00:42:54] Și grijă au [00:42:55] avut ăștia la mizilicuri din astea, dar când ți se urcă uite un conținut din ăsta, nu-l văd. [00:43:00] Da. În fine. Deci [00:43:05] rugămintea mea către românii este asta să nu își pierdă încrederea. Hai să devenim[00:43:08] George Buhnici: un pic mai aplicați. Adică mă [00:43:10] registrez, după care îți facem un pic de educație, îmi dai niște regulamente, le punem în descriere ca să [00:43:15] mai vadă creatori și alți oameni care vor să posteze pe internet și să fie în legalitate, să fie [00:43:20] siguri că dacă tot te-a pus să vorbești cu oameni mulți Nu e ca și cum ai vorbit tu singur în [00:43:25] toaletă în duș Așa[00:43:26] Valentin Jucan: este[00:43:26] George Buhnici: Ai niște reguli când ești în civilizație Că de-aia te îmbraci, poate te [00:43:30] mai dai cu un deodorant Dar când ești pe stradă, respecti niște reguli Când comunici, respecti niște reguli [00:43:35] Eu de-aia am făcut facultate N-am făcut facultate ca să-mi iau diplomă Că nu mi-a cerut-o nimeni încă [00:43:40] Eu am terminat facultatea Ba da, cred că la ProTV mi-am băgat-o la cartea de muncă[00:43:44] Valentin Jucan: Candidează [00:43:45] undeva și o să ți se ceară[00:43:46] George Buhnici: O să mi se ceară Dar eu am stat și m-am gândit de ce a meritat să fac [00:43:50] facultatea aia Că m-a ținut un pic din treabă Că eu aveam treabă pe teren, știi?[00:43:53] Că am făcut și [00:43:55] lucram în același timp Cu[00:43:56] Valentin Jucan: culme ai făcut și facultate[00:43:58] George Buhnici: Una, n-am făcut mai [00:44:00] multe una Și nu mi-am dat încă un doctorat Dar anyway, asta e altă discuție Și am stat și m-am dat seama [00:44:05] Totuși facultatea asta de jurnalistică Este până la urmă un set de instrucțiuni [00:44:10] Și regulament de igienă Ca să nu mă infectez și să nu opățesc Și slavă Domnului am [00:44:15] cazierul curat După 20...[00:44:18] Șapte de ani. [00:44:20] Adică cred că dacă înveți, dacă chiar vrei să vorbești pe internet, pe ziar, pe radio, pe televiziune [00:44:25] și îți faci îți iei regulile astea, s-ar putea să fie în [00:44:30] primul rând mai bine pentru tine. De-aia eu sunt pentru reguli M-ai îndervat foarte multă vreme în biurocratie, [00:44:35] după care am început să mă înțeleg cât cât până la un punct.[00:44:37] Mă frustrează în continuare, dar înțeleg [00:44:40] utilitatea până la un punct, să nu blocheze tot, să gripeze absolut tot. Deci sunt pentru [00:44:45] chestia asta și înțeleg că avem nevoie de niște reguli măcar cum ar fi, codul bunelor maniere, [00:44:50] o chestie de genul ăsta. Cu toate astea mi se pare o problemă în momentul în care [00:44:55] am atât de multe voci și atât de puțini oameni acolo la CNA și mai ales dacă încerc să [00:45:00] îi dau cancel cuiva, mă apuc și îi trimit niște, îi caut în tot istoricul și îi găsesc ceva și [00:45:05] îi trimit la CNA.[00:45:05] Știi[00:45:05] Valentin Jucan: ce-i culmea? Că dacă te duci în Franța să faci acum ce faci [00:45:10] să faci acolo ce faci acum, te-ntorci în România. [00:45:15] Serios vorbesc. Cum e? De exemplu ceneau francez ca să [00:45:20] vorbim pe înțelesul tuturor, are un mecanism prin care declară o [00:45:25] persoană ca fiind persoană publică. Ce părere ai? What? Exact. [00:45:30] Cum vine asta?[00:45:30] Fix cum sună. Persoană publică? Da. Cum știi o [00:45:35] persoană e publică? Există niște criterii De ce? Pentru că ei [00:45:40] au spus așa, nu poți să te ascunzi în spatele unei [00:45:45] identități. Eu sunt o simplă persoană privată dar am un milion de [00:45:50] followers, deci clar sunt un creator de [00:45:55] opinie, un formator de opinie, dar eu sunt o persoană privată, prin urmare nu răspund pentru [00:46:00] faptele mele și pentru ceea ce spun.[00:46:01] George Buhnici: Și[00:46:02] Valentin Jucan: atunci există niște criterii. [00:46:05] Aceleași criterii se aplică și a persoanelor care vor să [00:46:10] candideze, dar nu sunt politicieni. Gătesc extraordinar fac rețete de [00:46:15] zi bine să mănânci prin ecran, mai [00:46:20] fac și mici glume și mici comentarii, sunt extrem de recunoșcibile, [00:46:25] sunt în mentalul colectiv bine întipărite aceste persoane.[00:46:28] Ei bine, [00:46:30] potențialul de candidată Gătesc extraordinar fac rețete de zi bine. În momentul [00:46:35] ăsta noi știm cu toții, iată că tradiția politicienilor care sunt [00:46:40] politicieni s-a cam dus. E[00:46:41] George Buhnici: o filieră de carieră pentru a ajunge într-o funcție de genul[00:46:44] Valentin Jucan: ăsta Exact [00:46:45] deci cu cât ești mai cunoscut, cu atât ai o [00:46:50] cale mai rapidă către această candidatură.[00:46:52] Noi am avut pe unul anul trecut de care nu știa [00:46:55] nimeni, ci că mai nimeni, nimic. Dar ce ne-au din [00:47:00] Franța poate să facă acest lucru, pentru că în momentul în care ce ne-au din Franța spune ești [00:47:05] persoană publică, ți se aplică un set de reguli. Setul acela de reguli ține [00:47:10] și se îndreaptă către responsabilitate.[00:47:14] Pentru [00:47:15] că în acel moment tu nu mai ești responsabil de câteva [00:47:20] like-uri, ci ești responsabil de efectele cuvintelor tale. [00:47:25] Și la nivel individual Suntem responsabili de [00:47:30] cuvintele pe care le spunem, chiar și partenerului sau partenerii de acasă nu? Pe care poți să o faci [00:47:35] să sufere doar cu niște cuvinte.[00:47:37] Dar în momentul în care ai o [00:47:40] audiență care te urmărește, followers ce înseamnă? Te [00:47:45] urmează. Te urmează în idei, te urmează în gândurile [00:47:50] tale, te urmează Ce te[00:47:51] George Buhnici: urmăresc? Că te și urmează e... Că dacă i-ar urma [00:47:55] toți pe frații Tate, am fi rău.[00:47:57] Valentin Jucan: Păi da, dar pe cel din Statele Unite, pe, cum îl [00:48:00] cheamă de la Infowars, l-au urmat.[00:48:02] Pe Alex Jones, da. Alex Jones, mersi. [00:48:05] Pe Alex Jones l-au urmat, de-a dreptul l-au urmat. Și, da, nu vreau să [00:48:10] divaghez în zona aceea deci autoritatea din Franța [00:48:15] pune în față acest set de reguli și spune, dom'le, de acum ești persoană publică. Tu trebuie să ai niște [00:48:20] responsabilități pentru că ai un, ai o audiență semnificativă și în acest moment [00:48:25] tu nu mai poți să visă Astea sunt niște reguli [00:48:30] din Franța, marea democrație franceză, după care noi ca stat, arhitectura statului [00:48:35] nostru este o arhitectură după model francez și noi ca autoritate realmente suntem construiți după [00:48:40] model francez, după modelul autorității din Franța.[00:48:43] De unde știm[00:48:44] George Buhnici: [00:48:45] noi că e o idee bună? Pentru că asta duce la opresiune, la cenzură, ar zice unii. [00:48:50] Îi aud, îi văd, la fel cum și în Marea Britanie, uite [00:48:55] sunt oameni care pentru niște opinii pe internet au ajuns să fie arestați. Ai cazul Tommy [00:49:00] Robinson, spre exemplu care a ajuns să se plângă de milă mai ales în Statele Unite, că pentru [00:49:05] libertatea de opinie a ajuns să plătească cu închisoarea, ba chiar îi ți-ai ținut la [00:49:10] carceră.[00:49:12] Valentin Jucan: Asta este o discuție Știu i-am întrebat pe [00:49:15] niște prieteni din Statele Unite la un moment dat, anul trecut de fapt, i-am întrebat [00:49:20] Bă zic Ku Klux Klan a voi e scos? E scos [00:49:25] E ilegal? E că, uite discutam despre regimul fascist și nu, [00:49:30] nu este ilegal. E ilegal să te apuci să spui cagula pe cap și [00:49:35] să te duci să și acționezi, dar nu este scos în afara legii Ku Klux Klan, [00:49:40] ok?[00:49:40] Și zic bun, dar pot să vin să promovez regimul [00:49:45] comunist? Și zic sigur cum să nu E libertate de exprimare. Și când-am întrebat, bă, dar [00:49:50] nu vă e frică că vă întoarceți la comunism? Tu zici, păi stai puțin, cum să ne întoarcem la comunism? [00:49:55] Păi fix asta este cheia. Francezii [00:50:00] se pot întoarce la comunism. Românii se pot întoarce la comunism.[00:50:03] E, asta [00:50:05] e problema. Că noi întotdeauna atunci când vrem să [00:50:10] prejudiciem într-un fel sau altul și știm acest lucru în minte ne raportăm la niște [00:50:15] mecanisme din niște state care nu au această [00:50:20] sabie deasupra capului. Americanii n-au cum să se întoarcă la comunism. Pentru că nu au avut [00:50:25] comunismul. E cam bancul de la Erevan Da, știu că e cam bancul de la Erevan.[00:50:28] Alo, se poate construi comunismul America. [00:50:30] discursul Da dar păcat. Cum? Bancul de la radio [00:50:35] Erevan. Bună ziua! Știți am o întrebare. S-ar putea construi comunismul în statele nite? Și [00:50:40] răspunsul e da, sigur dar e păcat E adevărat. Deci e vorba despre [00:50:45] niște reflexe ale societății. Și noi [00:50:50] trebuie să ne protejăm democrația.[00:50:51] Nu niște[00:50:51] George Buhnici: anticorpi la dictatură pentru că încă este în memoria măcar a [00:50:55] părinților noștri. Asta nu este[00:50:56] Valentin Jucan: anticorp, scuză-mă. Nu e? Asta e frică.[00:50:59] George Buhnici: Frica [00:51:00] păzește bostănăria atunci. Pentru un timp limitat Pentru timp Pentru că în America am văzut aceași [00:51:05] promisiune a unei epoci de aur a Statelor Unite [00:51:10] într-un discurs al unui președinte cu ambiții autocratice.[00:51:13] Valentin Jucan: Putem[00:51:14] George Buhnici: spune asta?[00:51:14] Valentin Jucan: [00:51:15] Da, dar nu ne interesează Statele Unite. Noi suntem Uniunea Europeană și noi avem niște valori [00:51:20] și am aderat la Uniunea Europeană pentru ne-am dorit. Nu știu cum e. Exact. Și atrăgătoare. [00:51:25] Problema la noi este că această frică Nu este suficientă. Noi nu [00:51:30] trebuie să aderăm, noi nu trebuie să fim parte din Uniunea Europeană pentru că ne este [00:51:35] frică de ruși.[00:51:36] Noi nu trebuie să fim în NATO pentru că ne este frică de ruși. Noi nu [00:51:40] trebuie să fim corecți și nu trebuie să avem o educație pentru că ne este [00:51:45] frică de comunism. Nu, pentru că această frică începe să se estompeze. [00:51:50] Noi trebuie să adăugăm convingerea nu frica, ci [00:51:55] convingerea Aia este cea care este de lungă durată.[00:51:58] Într-adevăr sentimentul [00:52:00] de frică este sentimentul de bază primordial, cel mai puternic Foamea și frica,[00:52:04] George Buhnici: cele [00:52:05] mai puternice. Foamea frica,[00:52:05] Valentin Jucan: dar pe termen lung nu este suficient. Noi trebuie să ne creăm acea [00:52:10] convingere și noi trebuie să vrem să fim parte din Uniunea Europeană pentru că știm că [00:52:15] aceasta este calea cea bună.[00:52:16] Pentru că știm că acelea... Acelea sunt valorile [00:52:20] Pe care le împărtășim și noi. Nu pentru că mi-e frică de ruși. Deci nu e [00:52:25] de[00:52:25] George Buhnici: frică ci pentru valori. Exact. Asta e important. Asta este o chestie o dimensiune pe care [00:52:30] multă vreme și mie mi-a scăpat. Dar la asta și m-am gândit mai bine. De ce îmi place atât de mult Europa și [00:52:35] de ce n-am emigrat încă în altă parte?[00:52:36] Cum ar fi Rusia? Cum ar fi Rusia? Da! De ce? [00:52:40] Am auzit că nimeni nu se contrazice acolo. Exact. Deci e[00:52:43] Valentin Jucan: paradisul Toată lumea e de [00:52:45] acord. Câți au zburat mă la St. Petersburg fără să-și ia blănuri? . [00:52:50][00:52:51] George Buhnici: Așa. Dar e foarte frumos acolo. Îmi doresc ajung. Am prieteni care [00:52:55] mi-au zis. Moscova e superbă. Mi-ar plăcea să văd.[00:52:57] Însă până când ajung acolo dacă ajung vreodată... [00:53:00] Am scris Dacă mai ajung vreodată că am avut niște podcasturi pe aici despre... Nu știu dacă mai... [00:53:05] Hai să vorbim despre diferența între valori și [00:53:10] frică. Pentru că noi de frică încercăm să nu ne întoarcem la dictatură și când vedem [00:53:15] chiar și un președinte care poate fi bine intenționat, cum e Donald Trump, te uiți așa un pic la el și zici, [00:53:20] bă, arată carața, face carața, merge carața s-ar putea să fie [00:53:25] rață.[00:53:25] Bă are înclină către zona aia de autocrație, sunt [00:53:30] semne acolo că am mai văzut povestea asta, promisiunea unei țări mărețe, o [00:53:35] epocă de aur, doar eu pot să fac chestia asta, sunt cel mai bun de până acum, bă, astea-s cuvintele [00:53:40] lui. Dincoace însă, noi nu mai suntem în magia aia [00:53:45] ca să avem noi un lider maxim, că ne uităm și la ursula, dacă e nevoie facem mișto, dacă e nevoie și de ea.[00:53:49] [00:53:50] Chiar dacă ea teoretic acum e șefa la Europa, între ghilimele, am făcut-o cam sfin. [00:53:55] Suntem pe internet, pot să zic șefa Europei să nu mă luați la cenea că am făcut greșeli gramaticale. [00:54:00] Dar noi ne știm clar că nu ne interesează atât de mult liderii că ne [00:54:05] interesează niște valori. Și acum, o să fac o afirmație.[00:54:09] Este, [00:54:10] din acest punct de vedere, Europa mai evoluată decât Statele Unite sau este în urmă? [00:54:15] Pentru că ei par mult mai motivați, sunt, par, mult mai avansați de anumite puncte de [00:54:20] vedere, iar noi aici părem birocrați și înțepeniți în timp dar nu prea avem lideri. [00:54:25][00:54:26] Valentin Jucan: Nu o să pic în cap cana asta. Să fac comparații între America și [00:54:30] Europa, scuză-mă.[00:54:31] Am încercat. Nu, nu, nu. Sunt sisteme, [00:54:35] sunt istorie diferite, sunt sisteme diferite. Unui europeană pare Ei încă-au văzut cum e cu [00:54:40] Ceaușescu. Cred că le trebuie un Ceaușescu ca să înțeleagă. Păi hai să-l trimitem [00:54:45] pe ăsta care vrea acum să-l trimitem acolo la ei dacă îl iubesc atât de mult. Dar nu cred că îl iubesc, că nu i-am auzit vorbind [00:54:50] despre el public.[00:54:55] [00:55:00] [00:55:05] [00:55:10] [00:55:15][00:55:17] Nu [00:55:20] cred că [00:55:25] îl [00:55:30] iubesc,[00:55:32] George Buhnici: că [00:55:35] nu i-am [00:55:40] [00:55:45] vorbind el public. Exagerez de sigur dar [00:55:50] democraţia pe cât de, într-adevăr de echitabilă este cu mai [00:55:55] mulţi, nu prea introduce eficienţă pentru obiective [00:56:00] majore. Este agitată este împrăştiată, este messy.[00:56:03] Valentin Jucan: Dar da, [00:56:05] este exact de ceea ce avem nevoie. Sunt perfect de acord cu tine, [00:56:10] dar în momentul în care eu mă apuc şi pun 10.000 de oameni în rând şi unul îmi [00:56:15] iese de acolo şi eu îl biciuiesc un pic să-mi vină înapoi aia nu mai e [00:56:20] democraţie.[00:56:21] Pur și simplu, numai democrație. Democrația asta [00:56:25] implică. Și știi ce este cel mai nu interesant, cel mai [00:56:30] crunt? Că cei care vor să ne submineze democrația [00:56:35] cunosc la perfecție democrația și mecanismele ei și folosesc mecanismele împotriva [00:56:40] democrației însăși. Absolut toate începând cu libertatea de exprimare.[00:56:43] De-aia suntem buimaci de cap [00:56:45] și de-aia noi ca țară noi ca neam trebuie să ne creăm [00:56:50] acești anticorpi împotriva dezinformării pentru a fi conștienți de niște [00:56:55] lucruri, pentru a avea niște reflexe nu pentru a-i convinge pe români că democrația, că [00:57:00] Europa

Radio Campus Tours – 99.5 FM
11 mars – le Quart d'heure de lecture national

Radio Campus Tours – 99.5 FM

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2025


En attendant la prochaine édition des Nuits de la lecture, le Centre national du livre (CNL) en lien avec le ministère de l’Éducation national et l’ensemble de ses partenaires invite, pour la quatrième édition, tous les Françaises et Français à célébrer collectivement la lecture à travers un « quart d’heure de lecture » national, le […] L'article 11 mars – le Quart d'heure de lecture national est apparu en premier sur Radio Campus Tours - 99.5 FM.

Soccer Down Here
Soccer For US Pod, Episode 110: USMNT 50-Man Rosters

Soccer Down Here

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2025 65:29


Bart and Thomas try to build a 50-player provisional roster for the USMNT. Imagining no one is hurt (lol), here are the guys they'd list if they were Mauricio Pochettino preparing for Concacaf Nations League. Follow the show on BlueSky and Twitter: @soccerforuspodSupport the show: buymeacoffee.com/soccerforuspod

Radio Campus Tours – 99.5 FM
Les Nuits de la Lecture – chroniques de nos invités

Radio Campus Tours – 99.5 FM

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2025


Evenement national porté par le CNL – Centre National du Livre, tous les ans au mois de janvier, les Nuits de la lecture mettent à l’honneur auteurs et autrices, lecteurs et lectrices et se veulent un moment de partage littéraire ouvert à tous. Votre radio s’associe aux Nuits de la lecture et vous propose une […] L'article Les Nuits de la Lecture – chroniques de nos invités est apparu en premier sur Radio Campus Tours - 99.5 FM.

Becker’s Healthcare Podcast
Heather Troutt, MSN, RN, CNL, RNC, Director of Women and Children's Services at NorthBay Health

Becker’s Healthcare Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2025 12:50


Join Heather Troutt, MSN, RN, CNL, RNC, Director of Women and Children's Services at NorthBay Health, as she discusses the hospital's fourth consecutive U.S. News & World Report High-Performing rating in maternity care. Heather discusses the criteria behind the distinction, the importance of patient-centered care, and NorthBay's ongoing commitment to delivering high-quality, accessible services for mothers and babies.

Becker’s Women’s Leadership
Heather Troutt, MSN, RN, CNL, RNC, Director of Women and Children's Services at NorthBay Health

Becker’s Women’s Leadership

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2025 12:50


Join Heather Troutt, MSN, RN, CNL, RNC, Director of Women and Children's Services at NorthBay Health, as she discusses the hospital's fourth consecutive U.S. News & World Report High-Performing rating in maternity care. Heather discusses the criteria behind the distinction, the importance of patient-centered care, and NorthBay's ongoing commitment to delivering high-quality, accessible services for mothers and babies.

Becker’s Healthcare - Clinical Leadership Podcast
Heather Troutt, MSN, RN, CNL, RNC, Director of Women and Children's Services at NorthBay Health

Becker’s Healthcare - Clinical Leadership Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2025 12:50


Join Heather Troutt, MSN, RN, CNL, RNC, Director of Women and Children's Services at NorthBay Health, as she discusses the hospital's fourth consecutive U.S. News & World Report High-Performing rating in maternity care. Heather discusses the criteria behind the distinction, the importance of patient-centered care, and NorthBay's ongoing commitment to delivering high-quality, accessible services for mothers and babies.

Imvo  n'imvano
Imvo n'Imvano 11/1/2025

Imvo n'imvano

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2025 59:00


Urukiko rwubahiriza itegeko nshinga rwanze ibirego bya CNL n'urunani Burundi bwa Bose

Soccer Down Here
Soccer For US Pod, Episode 103: USMNT Conquers Jamaica in Nations League Quarterfinal

Soccer Down Here

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2024 71:16


Bart and Thomas welcome Lawrence back onto the podcast to revel in the victory over Jamaica in the Concacaf Nations League quarterfinals. Support the show: buymeacoffee.com/soccerforuspod

Caught Offside
Caught Offside: USMNT defeat Jamaica in the CNL quarterfinals

Caught Offside

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2024 46:59


We break down a 4-2 second leg victory for the USMNT over Jamaica in the CNL quarterfinals. The boys discuss Pulisic's terrific goal, Pepi making an impact and Poch's system taking hold. Plus, the ridiculous reason that two Jamaican players missed the game, Javier Aguirre getting hit by a beer can and Gregg Berhalter just another face in the crowd.***BY THE WAY... Our new premium channel, Caught Offside Plus, is up and running! Just go to https://caughtoffside.supercast.com to sign up! Once you have access to the premium feed, check out our special "welcome episode" from June 24th (we don't think you'll be disappointed) and enjoy the additional Caught Offside content that's soon to be headed your way.And just a reminder: We've partnered up with Manscaped during the month of November! Get 20% OFF @manscaped + Free Shipping with promo code caughtoffside at MANSCAPED.com! #ad #manscapedpod---Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@caughtoffsidepod X: https://twitter.com/COsoccerpodInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/caughtoffsidepod/Email: CaughtOffsidePod@gmail.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast
USMNT bounce Jamaica to advance to Concacaf Nations League semis | instant recap & reaction (Soccer 11/19)

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2024 64:53


The Stars and Stripes put on a show in St. Louis with four goals to punch their ticket to the CNL final four! Jimmy Conrad, Charlie Davies and Tony Meola analyze the 4-2 win over the Reggae Boyz and shine a light on impressive performances from the likes Tanner Tessmann (11:14) and Ricardo Pepi (15:40). Jamaica's passport fiasco (23:04). Christian Pulisic was named MOTM but the guys were more impressed with Tim Weah's return to the national team fold (24:13). Will the likes of Folarin Balogun struggle to get into the lineup (31:01)? Mauricio Pochettino's imprint on the team was evident for all to see (27:42). With Venezuela confirmed as the January camp opponent, will any MLS players make their case to crack into the full roster (42:25)? Finally, the crew take comments and questions about Tim Ream's longevity, Matt Turner's comfortability, Malik Tillman's struggles and whether Mexico can turn things around (48:22). Call It What You Want is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Call It What You Want team on X: @JimmyConrad, @CharlieDavies9, @TMeola1 Visit the betting arena on CBSSports.com for all the latest in sportsbook reviews and sportsbook promos for betting on soccer. For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ You can also watch Call It What You Want on the CBS Sports Golazo Network for free on connected TVs and mobile devices through the CBS Sports app, Pluto TV, and on CBSSports.com as well as Paramount+. Watch UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Europa Conference League, EFL, Serie A, Coppa Italia, CONCACAF Nations League, NWSL, Scottish Premiership, Brasileiro, Argentine Primera División, AFC Champion League by subscribing to Paramount+ Sign up to the Golazo newsletter, your ultimate guide to the Beautiful Game as our experts take you beyond the pitch and around the globe with news that matters. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast
Weah returns for St. Louis showdown | USMNT vs. Jamaica preview & predictions (Soccer 11/16)

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2024 72:04


Jimmy Conrad and Tony Meola look ahead to the United States men's national team's Concacaf Nations League quarterfinal return leg against the Reggae Boyz. What has Mauricio Pochettino learned so far about his new team (07:22)? With Tim Weah back from suspension is there still room for Yunus Musah (12:52)? Jamaica are still in the tie as Steve McClaren welcomes back Michail Antonio (21:55). The guys pick over the projected USMNT lineup (30:25). Ugly scenes elsewhere in CNL action as Mexico coach Javier Aguirre was bloodied after being struck by a projectile (35:35). Can El Tri turn things around against Honduras? Then, it's preview mailbag time: Next man up after Tim Ream (48:02), potential landing spots for Tanner Tessmann (55:34), Malik Tillman's best position (58:53), and the center back pipeline (1:01:53).     Call It What You Want is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Call It What You Want team on X: @JimmyConrad, @CharlieDavies9, @TMeola1 Visit the betting arena on CBSSports.com for all the latest in sportsbook reviews and sportsbook promos for betting on soccer. For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ You can also watch Call It What You Want on the CBS Sports Golazo Network for free on connected TVs and mobile devices through the CBS Sports app, Pluto TV, and on CBSSports.com as well as Paramount+. Watch UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Europa Conference League, EFL, Serie A, Coppa Italia, CONCACAF Nations League, NWSL, Scottish Premiership, Brasileiro, Argentine Primera División, AFC Champion League by subscribing to Paramount+ Sign up to the Golazo newsletter, your ultimate guide to the Beautiful Game as our experts take you beyond the pitch and around the globe with news that matters. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Nurse Keith Show
Maximizing the Impact of Emergency Nursing

The Nurse Keith Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2024 60:20


On episode 495 of The Nurse Keith Show nursing and healthcare career podcast, Keith interviews Michael Dexter, MSN, RN, EMT, CEN, CPEN, CFRN, CTRN, TCRN, CCRN, CNL, the Director of Professional Development at the Board of Certification for Emergency Nursing (BCEN). In the course of their conversation, Keith and Michael discuss how emergency nurses can lean into their specialty, sharpen their skills and knowledge, and maximize their impact on patients and the quality of care delivered in emergency departments around the country. They also discuss BCEN's overarching mission of promoting education and growth within emergency nursing, and the six certifications overseen and administered by this crucial specialty nursing organization. Michael Dexter holds a master's degree as a clinical nurse leader and 7 board certifications. He is passionate about professional growth, continuous learning, and collaborative care practices. Having worked emergency, transport, and cardiac care areas, Michael uses his experiences to tie clinical conditions together across the entire emergency care spectrum. Connect with Michael Dexter and BCEN: BCEN website Facebook BCEN on LinkedIn Instagram YouTube Michael Dexter on LinkedIn Contact Nurse Keith about holistic career coaching to elevate your nursing and healthcare career at NurseKeith.com. Keith also offers services as a motivational and keynote speaker and freelance nurse writer. You can always find Keith on LinkedIn. Are you looking for a novel way to empower your career and move forward in life? Keith's wife, Shada McKenzie, is a gifted astrologer and reader of the tarot who combines ancient and modern techniques to provide valuable insights into your motivations, aspirations, and life trajectory, and she offers listeners of The Nurse Keith Show a 10% discount on their first consultation. Contact Shada at TheCircelandtheDot.com or shada@thecircleandthedot.com.

Soccer Down Here
Soccer For US Pod, Episode 102: USMNT Roster for Nations League vs Jamaica

Soccer Down Here

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2024 54:42


Bart and Thomas chat about Pochettino's roster for the Concacaf Nations League quarterfinals. There are some concerns, but the guys are confident we can get a result in Kingston, a place we've had some good fortune before.Support the show: buymeacoffee.com/soccerforuspod

World of Concacaf Podcast
NEWSDESK: Anguilla Wins! Concacaf Nations League September Recap

World of Concacaf Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2024 58:04


The most wonderful tournament in all of sports returned for another edition in the September FIFA window, so Donald and Eric had to talk about it! From League A to League C (or from League C to League A) we've got it all covered, highlighting Anguilla's historic away win over Turks and Caicos, Saint Lucia's big window in Grenada and Nicaragua leaving it late twice. After recapping CNL, the topic is the USMNT and their long awaited hire of Mauricio Pochettino to take over the bench. Support the podcast and get bonus content at the World of Concacaf Patreon at www.patreon.com/podcacaf 

Nursing2024 Podcast
Mastering the new nurse transition to practice: Staffing for optimal patient safety

Nursing2024 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2024 52:39


Properly transitioning new nurses into practice and ensuring adequate nursing staff levels are some of healthcare's biggest patient safety concerns. In this episode, Shannon Davila, MSN, RN, CPPS, CIC, CPHQ, FAPIC and Anna Laden Thomas, MSN, RN, CCRN, CPPS, CNL from ECRI join Nursing2024 to examine the Top 10 Patient Safety Concerns report and why the new nurse transition is at the top for 2024/2025. Shannon and Anna share actionable strategies for managers, educators, and healthcare leaders to prepare new nursing staff for safe practice. They discuss adjusting orientations, enhancing preceptor training, leveraging academic partnerships, accounting for generational shifts in learning preferences, and the role of a culture of safety data in optimizing staffing levels. Don't miss these vital insights for attracting, developing, and retaining skilled nurses capable of delivering high-quality care.

The Neoliberal Podcast
It's Kamala Time ft. Matti Miranda

The Neoliberal Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 52:35


CNL assistant director Matti Miranda joins the show for an emergency podcast on Joe Biden dropping out of the presidential race and endorsing Kamala Harris. Is this a positive development for Democrats? How will Republicans respond? How does this change the dynamics of the 2024 presidential race? To get bonus episodes, support us at patreon.com/newliberalpodcast or https://cnliberalism.org/become-a-member Got questions? Send us a note at mailbag@cnliberalism.org. Follow us at: https://twitter.com/CNLiberalism https://cnliberalism.org/   Join a local chapter at https://cnliberalism.org/become-a-member/  

The Neoliberal Podcast
Green Energy, Wires, and Housing ft. Rep. Scott Peters

The Neoliberal Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2024 55:39


This episode features a livestream the Center for New Liberalism hosted with Congressman Scott Peters of San Diego. CNL director Colin Mortimer and Rep. Peters discuss how to build green energy more quickly, the ins and outs of permitting reform, why focusing on transmission and the electrical grid is so important, housing and YIMBYism, and much more!   To get bonus episodes, support us at patreon.com/newliberalpodcast or https://cnliberalism.org/become-a-member Got questions? Send us a note at mailbag@cnliberalism.org. Follow us at: https://twitter.com/CNLiberalism https://cnliberalism.org/   Join a local chapter at https://cnliberalism.org/become-a-member/  

Nurse Converse, presented by Nurse.org
Balancing Motherhood and a Nursing Career with Kasey Mundell, Nurse Educator

Nurse Converse, presented by Nurse.org

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 14:59


In this episode of Nurse Converse, Kasey Mundell, MSN, RN, CNL, CNE reflects on the challenges of balancing motherhood and nursing school. She discusses her personal struggles, feelings of guilt, and the impact on her confidence. Kasey also shares the difficulties she faced juggling responsibilities during nursing school. Tune in to hear how she found strength in the midst of chaos and discovered the importance of support during this demanding journey.>>Balancing Motherhood and a Nursing CareerJump Ahead to Listen:[00:37] Juggling motherhood and nursing school.[07:26] Nursing as a great profession.[11:03] Motherhood and nursing education.[13:33] Pursuing nursing with passion.Connect with Kasey on social media:Instagram: drnurseprnTikTok: drnurseprn7For more information, full transcript and videos visit Nurse.org/podcastJoin our newsletter at nurse.org/joinInstagram: @nurse_orgTikTok: @nurse.orgFacebook: @nurse.orgYouTube: Nurse.org

Nurse Converse, presented by Nurse.org
I Quit My Job as A Forensic Death Investigator To Become a Nurse, Here's Why with Kasey Mundell, MSN, RN, CNL, CNE

Nurse Converse, presented by Nurse.org

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 16:49


In this episode of Nurse Converse, Kasey Mundell, MSN, RN, CNL, CNE shares her unexpected journey to becoming a nurse, from a career interest in law enforcement and forensics to a fulfilling role as a nursing educator.  She highlights the unpredictable nature of nursing careers, emphasizing the importance of embracing change and seeking support. Ultimately, Kasey's story serves as an inspirational testament to the diverse and rewarding paths within the nursing profession, encouraging others to pursue their passions and embrace the journey of self-discovery. Jump Ahead to Listen:[03:48] Nursing as a Career Option.[07:19] Nursing school journey and depression.[12:19] Mental health and medication.[15:56] Living the dream in nursing.Connect with Kasey on social media:Instagram: drnurseprnTikTok: drnurseprn7For more information, full transcript and videos visit Nurse.org/podcastJoin our newsletter at nurse.org/joinInstagram: @nurse_orgTikTok: @nurse.orgFacebook: @nurse.orgYouTube: Nurse.org

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast
Podcast #166: Okemo Vice President & General Manager Bruce Schmidt

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2024 72:16


This podcast hit paid subscribers' inboxes on April 5. It dropped for free subscribers on April 12. To receive future pods as soon as they're live, and to support independent ski journalism, please consider an upgrade to a paid subscription. You can also subscribe to the free tier below:WhoBruce Schmidt, Vice President and General Manager at Okemo Mountain Resort, VermontRecorded onFeb. 27, 2024 (apologies for the delay)About OkemoClick here for a mountain stats overviewOwned by: Vail ResortsLocated in: Ludlow, VermontYear founded: 1956Pass affiliations:* Epic Pass: unlimited access* Epic Local Pass: unlimited access* Epic Northeast Value Pass: unlimited access with holiday blackouts* Epic Northeast Midweek Pass: unlimited weekday access with holiday blackouts* Epic Day Pass: access on “all resorts” and “32 resorts” tiersClosest neighboring ski areas: Killington (:22), Magic (:26), Bromley (:31), Pico (:32), Ascutney (:33), Bellows Falls (:37), Stratton (:41), Saskadena Six (:44), Ski Quechee (:48), Storrs Hill (:52), Whaleback (:56), Mount Snow (1:04), Hermitage Club (1:10)Base elevation: 1,144 feetSummit elevation: 3,344 feetVertical drop: 2,200 feetSkiable Acres: 632Average annual snowfall: 120 inches per On The Snow; Vail claims 200.Trail count: 121 (30% advanced, 37% intermediate, 33% beginner) + 6 terrain parksLift count: 20 (2 six-packs, 4 high-speed quads, 5 fixed-grip quads, 2 triples, 1 platter, 6 carpets – view Lift Blog's inventory of Okemo's lift fleet)View historic Okemo trailmaps on skimap.org.Why I interviewed himWhether by plan or by happenstance, Vail ended up with a nearly perfect mix of Vermont ski areas. Stowe is the beater, with the big snows and the nasty trails and the amazing skiers and the Uphill Bros and the glades and the Front Four. Mount Snow is the sixth borough of New York City (but so is Florida and so is Stratton), big and loud and busy and bursting and messy, with a whole mountain carved out for a terrain park and big-drinking, good-timing crowds, as many skiers at the après, it can seem, as on the mountain. And Okemo is something that's kind of in-between and kind of totally different, at once tame and lively, a placid family redoubt that still bursts with that frantic Northeast energy.It's a hard place to define, and statistics won't do it. Line up Vermont's ski areas on a table, and Okemo looks bigger and better than Sugarbush or Stowe or Jay Peak. It isn't, of course, as anyone in the region will tell you. The place doesn't require the guts that its northern neighbors demand. It's big but not bossy. More of a stroll than a run, a good-timer cruising the Friday night streets in a drop-top low-rider, in no hurry at all to do anything other than this. It's like skiing Vermont without having to tangle with Vermont, like boating on a lake with no waves.Because of this unusual profile, New England skiers either adore Okemo or won't go anywhere near it. It is a singular place in a dense ski state that is the heart of a dense ski region. Okemo isn't particularly convenient to get to, isn't particularly snowy by Vermont standards, and isn't particularly interesting from a terrain point of view. And yet, it is, historically, the second-busiest ski area in the Northeast (after Killington). There is something there that works. Or at least, that has worked historically, as the place budded and flourished in the Mueller family's 36-year reign.But it's Vail's mountain now, an Epic Pass anchor that's shuffling and adding lifts for the crowds that that membership brings. While the season pass price has dropped, skier expectations have ramped up at Okemo, as they have everywhere in the social-media epoch. The grace that passholders granted the growing family-owned mountain has evaporated. Everyone's pulling the pins on their hand grenades and flinging them toward Broomfield every time a Saturday liftline materializes. It's not really fair, but it's how the world is right now. The least I can do is get their side of it.What we talked aboutSummer storm damage to Ludlow and Okemo; the resort helping the town; Vermont's select boards; New England resilience; Vail's My Epic Promise fund and how it helped employees post-storm; reminiscing on old-school Okemo and its Poma forest; the Muellers arrive; the impact of Jackson-Gore; how and why Okemo grew from inconsequential local bump to major New England ski hill; how Okemo expanded within the confines of Vermont's Act 250; Vail buys the mountain, along with Sunapee and Crested Butte; the Muellers' legacy; a Sunapee interlude; Vail adjusting to New England operations; mythbusters: snowmaking edition; the Great Chairlift Switcheroo of 2021; why Okemo didn't place bubbles on the Quantum 6; why Okemo's lift fleet is entirely made up of Poma machines; where Okemo could add a lift to the existing trail network; expansion potential; does Okemo groom too much?; glade expansion?; that baller snowmaking system; what happened when Okemo's season pass price dropped by more than $1,000; is Epic Pass access too loose at Okemo?; how to crowd-dodge; the Epic Northeast Midweek Pass; limiting lift ticket sales; and skyrocketing lift ticket prices.Why I thought that now was a good time for this interviewBruce Schmidt first collected a paycheck from Okemo in the late 1970s. That was a different mountain, a different ski industry, a different world. Pomas and double chairs and primitive snowmaking and mountain-man gear and no internet. It was grittier and colder, in the sense that snowpants and ski coats and heated gloves and socks were not so ubiquitous and affordable and high-quality as they are today. Skiing, particularly in New England, required a hardiness, a tolerance for cold and subtle pain that modernity has slowly shuffled out of the skier profile.Different as it was, that age of 210s and rear-wheel drive rigs was not that long ago, and Schmidt has experienced it as one continuous story. That sort of institutional and epochal tenure is rare, especially at one ski area, especially at one that has evolved as much as Okemo. Imagine if you showed up at surface-lift Hickory and watched it transform, over four decades, into sprawling Gore. That's essentially what Schmidt lived – and helped drive – at Okemo.That hardly ever happens. Small ski areas tend to stay small. Expansion is hard and expensive and, in Vermont especially, bureaucratically challenging. And yet little Okemo, wriggling in Killington's shadow, lodged between the state's southern and northern snow pockets, up past Mount Snow and Stratton but not so far from might-as-well-keep-driving Sugarbush and Mad River Glen, became, somehow, the fourth-largest ski area in America's fourth-largest ski state by skier visits (after Colorado, California, and Utah, typically).The Mueller family, which owned the ski area from 1982 until they sold it to Vail Resorts in 2018, were, of course, the visionaries and financiers behind that growth, the likes of which we will probably never witness in New England again. But as Vail's roots grow deeper and they make these mountains their own, that legacy will fade, if not necessarily dim. It was important, then, to download that part of Schmidt's brain to the internet, to make sure that story survived the big groom of time.What I got wrongI said in the intro that Bruce started at Okemo in 1987. He actually started in the late ‘70s and worked there on and off for several years, as he explains in the conversation.I said that Okemo's lift fleet was “100 percent Poma.” This is not exactly right, as some of the lifts are officially branded Leitner-Poma. I'm also not certain of the make of Okemo's carpets.I noted in the intro that Okemo was Vail's second-largest eastern mountain. It is actually their largest by skiable acreage (though Stowe feels larger to me, given the expansive unmarked but very skiable glades stuffed between nearly every trail). Here's a snapshot of Vail's entire portfolio for reference:Why you should ski OkemoThe first time I skied Okemo was 2007. I rode a 3:45 a.m. ski bus north from Manhattan. I remember thinking three things: 1) wow, this place is big; 2) wow, there are a lot of kids here; and 3) do they seriously groom every goddamn trail every single night?This was at the height of my off-piste mania. I'm not a great carver, especially after the cord gets chopped up and scratchy sublayers emerge. I prefer to maneuver, at a moderate pace, over terrain, meaning bumps or glades (which are basically bumps in the trees, at least on a typical Vermont day). It's more fun and interesting than blasting down wide-open, beaten-up groomers filled with New Yorkers.But wide-open, beaten-up groomers filled with New Yorkers is what Okemo is. At the time, I had no understanding of freeze-thaw cycles, of subtle snowfall differentials between nearby ski areas, of the demographic profile that drove such tight slope management (read: mediocre big-city skiers with no interest in anything other than getting to the bottom still breathing). All I knew was that for me, at the time, this wasn't what I was looking for.But what you want as a skier evolves over time. I still like terrain, and Okemo still doesn't have as much as I'd like. If that's what you need, take your Epic Pass to Stowe – they have plenty. But what I also like is skiing with my kids, skiing with my wife, morning cord laps off fast lifts, long meandering scenic routes to rest up between bumpers, exploring mountains border to border, getting a little lost among multiple base areas, big views, moderate pitches, and less-aggressive skiers (ride the K1 gondy or Superstar chair at Killington and then take the Sunburst Six at Okemo; the toning down of energy and attitude is palpable).Okemo not only has all that – it is all that. If that makes sense. This is one of the best family ski areas in the country. It feels like – it is – a supersized version of the busy ski areas in Massachusetts or Connecticut, a giant Wachusett or Catamount or Mohawk Mountain: unintimidating, wide-open, freewheeling, and quirky in its own overgroomed, overbusy way.If you hit it right, Okemo will give you bumps and glades and even, on a weekday, wide-open trails all to yourself. But that's not the typical Okemo experience, and it's not the point of the place. This is New England's friendly giant, a meandering mass of humanity, grinning and gripping and slightly frazzled, a disjointed but united-by-snow collective that, together, define Okemo as much as the mountain itself.Okemo on a stormy day in November 2021. Video by Stuart Winchester.Podcast NotesOn last summer's flooding in Okemo and LudlowI mean yowza:I hate to keep harping on New Englander's work ethic, but…I reset the same “dang New England you're badass” narrative that I brought up with Sunday River GM Brian Heon on the podcast a few weeks ago. I'm not from New England and I've never even lived there, and I'm from a region with the same sort of get-after-it problem-solver mentality and work ethic. But I'm still amazed at how every time New England gets smashed over the head with a frying pan, they just look annoyed for five minutes, put on a Band-Aid, and keep moving.On the fate of Plymouth, Bromley, Ascutney, and Plymouth/RoundtopSchmidt and I discuss several Vermont ski areas whose circa-1980s size rivaled that of Okemo's at the time. Here, for context, was Okemo before the Muellers arrived in 1982:It's hard to tell from the trailmap, but only four of the 10 or so lifts shown above were chairlifts. Today, Okemo has grown into Vermont's fourth-largest ski area by skiable acres (though I have reason to doubt the accuracy of the ski resort's self-reported tallies; Stowe, Sugarbush, and Jay all ski at least as big as Okemo, but officially report fewer skiable acres).Anyway, in the early ‘80s, Magic, Bromley, Ascutney, and Plymouth/Roundtop were approximate peers to Okemo. Bromley ran mostly chairlifts, and has evolved the most of this group, but it is far smaller than Okemo today. The mountain has always been well-managed, so it wasn't entirely fair to stick it in with this group, but the context is important here: Bromley today is roughly the same size that it was 40 years ago:Ascutney sold a 1,400-plus-foot vertical drop and a thick trail network in this 1982 trailmap. But the place went bust and sold its high-speed quad in 2012 (it's now the main lift at Vail-owned Crotched). Today, Ascutney consists of a lower-mountain ropetow and T-bar that rises just 450 vertical feet (you can still skin or hike the upper mountain trails).Magic, in the early ‘80s, was basically the same size it is today:A merger with now-private and liftless (but still skiable from Magic), Timber Ridge briefly supersized the place before it went out of business for a large part of the ‘90s:When Magic recovered from its long shutdown, it reverted to its historic footprint (with extensive glade skiing that either didn't exist or went unmarked in the ‘80s):And then there was Round Top, a 1,300-foot sometime private ski area also known as Bear Creek and Plymouth Notch. The area has sat idle since 2018, though the chairlifts are, last I checked, intact, and it can be yours for $6.5 million.Seriously you can buy it:On Okemo's expansion progressionThe Muellers' improbable transformation of Okemo into a New England Major happened in big chunks. First, they opened the Solitude area for the 1987-88 ski season:In 1994, South Face, far looker's left, opened a new pod of steeper runs toward the summit:The small Morningstar pod, located in the lower-right-hand corner of the trailmap, opened in 1995, mostly to serve a real estate development:The most dramatic change came in 2003, when Okemo opened the sprawling Jackson Gore complex:On Vermont Act 250It's nearly impossible to discuss Vermont skiing without referencing the infamous Act 250, which is, according to the official state website:…Vermont's land use and development law, enacted in 1970 at a time when Vermont was undergoing significant development pressure. The law provides a public, quasi-judicial process for reviewing and managing the environmental, social and fiscal consequences of major subdivisions and developments in Vermont. It assures that larger developments complement Vermont's unique landscape, economy and community needs. One of the strengths of Act 250 is the access it provides to neighbors and other interested parties to participate in the development review process. Applicants often work with neighbors, municipalities, state agencies and other interested groups to address concerns raised by a proposed development, resolving issues and mitigating impacts before a permit application is filed.As onerous as navigating Act 250 can seem, there is significantly more slopeside development in Vermont than in any other Northeastern state, and its large resorts are certainly more developed than anything in build-nothing New York.On the CNL lease structureSchmidt refers to “the CNL lease structure.” Here's what he was talking about: a company called CNL Lifestyle Properties once had a slick sideline in purchasing ski areas and leasing them back to the former owners. New England Ski History explains the historical context:As the banking crisis unfolded, many ski areas across the country transferred their debt into Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs). On December 5, 2008, Triple Peaks transferred its privately held Mt. Sunapee assets to CNL Lifestyle Properties, Inc.. Triple Peaks then entered into a long agreement with CNL to maintain operational control.The site put together a timeline of the various resorts CNL once owned, including, from 2008 to '17, Okemo:On the proximity of Okemo to Mount Sunapee Though Okemo and Sunapee sit in different states, they're only an hour apart:I snapped this pic of Okemo from the Sunapee summit a couple years ago (super zoomed in):On Mount Sunapee's ownershipThe State of New Hampshire owns two ski areas: Cannon Mountain and Mount Sunapee. In 1998, after decades of debate on the subject, the state leased the latter to the Muellers. When Vail acquired Triple Peaks (Okemo, Sunapee, and Crested Butte), in 2019, they either inherited or renegotiated the lease. For whatever reason, the state continues to manage Cannon as part of Franconia Notch State Park. A portion of the lease revenue that Vail pays the state each year is earmarked for capital improvements at Cannon.On glades at Stratton and KillingtonOkemo's trail footprint is light on glades compared to many of the large Vermont ski areas. I point to Killington and Stratton, in particular, in the podcast, mostly due to their proximity to Okemo (every Vermont ski area from Sugarbush on north has a vast glade network). Though it's just 20 minutes away, Killington rakes in around double Okemo's snowfall in an average winter, and the ski area maintains glades all over the mountain:Stratton, 40 minutes south, also averages more snow than Okemo and is a sneaky good glade mountain. It's easy to spend all day in the trees there when the snow's deep (and it's deep more often than you might think):On Okemo's historic pass pricesWe can have mountain-to-mountain debates over the impact Vail Resorts has on the resorts it purchases, but one thing that's inarguable: season pass prices typically plummet when the company acquires ski areas. Check out New England Ski History's itemization of Okemo pass prices over the years – that huge drop in 2018-19 represents the ownership shift and that year's cost of an Epic Local Pass (lift ticket and pass prices listed below are the maximum for that season):But, yeah, those day-ticket prices. Yikes.The Storm explores the world of lift-served skiing all year long. Join us.The Storm publishes year-round, and guarantees 100 articles per year. This is article 25/100 in 2024, and number 525 since launching on Oct. 13, 2019. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.stormskiing.com/subscribe

Soccer Down Here
Bart Keeler Joins SDH 3/25/24: SoccerForUS on USMNT and DosACero

Soccer Down Here

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2024 38:00


Here's the segment from this morning's SDH in its entirety with SoccerForUSPod's Bart Keeler looking back at the Nations League title tilt, the CNL tourney, and the chant...

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast
Aaronson & Wright added to CNL roster | Jamaica's danger men | The USMNT U-23s' acid test (Soccer 3/18)

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2024 64:19


After scoring the winners for their club sides on the weekend, Brenden Aaronson and Haji Wright have been added to the USMNT roster. Jimmy Conrad, Charlie Davies and Jesse Marsch discuss what each player brings to the team, why Brandon Vazquez was overlooked, and what Leon Bailey's absence from Jamaica's squad means ahead of Thursday's CNL clash. Plus, does the U.S. men's Olympic team stand a chance against France's U23s? Which Americans impressed the most across the pond? And what does Liga MX's dominance in the CONCACAF Champions Cup say about MLS teams? USMNT roster news (06:10): Wright and Aaronson replace Sargent and LDLT; Is the door closed for Brandon Vazquez?  The Reggae Boyz (20:36): Who is Heimir Hallgrimsson?; Bailey cut from roster, Gray suspended for semifinal; Jamaica's other weapons. Olympic ready? (32:37): Marko Mitrović names roster for March friendlies; U.S. Soccer's youth development; expectations for France game. Americans Abroad (45:12): Pass the ball to Pulisic!; Haji Wright: the good and the bad. MLS vs. Liga MX (58:48): What can we learn from the Concacaf Champions Cup? Call It What You Want is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Call It What You Want team on X: @JimmyConrad, @CharlieDavies9, @jessemarsch For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ You can also watch Call It What You Want on the CBS Sports Golazo Network for free on connected TVs and mobile devices through the CBS Sports app, Pluto TV, and on CBSSports.com as well as Paramount+. Watch UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Europa Conference League, Serie A, Coppa Italia, CONCACAF, Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, NWSL, Scottish Premiership, Brasileiro, Argentine Primera División, AFC Champion League by subscribing to Paramount+ Sign up to the Golazo newsletter, your ultimate guide to the Beautiful Game as our experts take you beyond the pitch and around the globe with news that matters. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast
Learning from Klopp and Guardiola | Reyna and CCV concerns | CNL roster talk | PSV's UCL hopes (Soccer 3/11)

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2024 58:20


Jimmy Conrad, Charlie Davies and Jesse Marsch are taking the show to the CONCACAF Nations League finals next week and there's a lot to discuss! Should Gregg Berhalter follow Nottingham Forest's lead and leave Gio Reyna out of his squad? Is it too soon to bring Tyler Adams back to camp? Plus, many Americans impressed for their club teams over the weekend, but was Joe Scally one of them? And what can PSV do to silence Dortmund's Yellow Wall on Wednesday? CIWYW is going to Texas! (05:05): Counting down to Dallas; What can USMNT learn from Liverpool vs. Man City? Roster news & debate (19:31): CCV injured, Tyler inching closer, Gio dropped... and which players round out the guys' list of CNL roster locks? American Abroad (36:11): McKennie the assist machine, Dest to the rescue, Scally's conservative approach.  UCL last 16 second leg preview (45:57): What PSV can do to get past Dortmund. W Gold Cup (52:01): Kilgore's USWNT wins hardware and Jaedyn Shaw is the future! Call It What You Want is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Call It What You Want team on X: @JimmyConrad, @CharlieDavies9, @jessemarsch For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ You can also watch Call It What You Want on the CBS Sports Golazo Network for free on connected TVs and mobile devices through the CBS Sports app, Pluto TV, and on CBSSports.com as well as Paramount+. Watch UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Europa Conference League, Serie A, Coppa Italia, CONCACAF, Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, NWSL, Scottish Premiership, Brasileiro, Argentine Primera División, AFC Champion League by subscribing to Paramount+ Sign up to the Golazo newsletter, your ultimate guide to the Beautiful Game as our experts take you beyond the pitch and around the globe with news that matters. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast
Berhalter hints at dropping Reyna | Pulisic scores Leao's goal | USWNT's water-logged win (Soccer 3/7)

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2024 56:04


With the CONCACAF Nations League finals just around the corner, Gregg Berhalter has alluded to Gio Reyna playing a diminished role. Jimmy Conrad, Charlie Davies and Jesse Marsch discuss the selection decisions facing the USMNT coach as he looks to fill his 23-man roster. Plus, Christian Pulisic's controversial goal, the USWNT's soggy win over Canada, and is CONCACAF disrespecting MLS teams? AC Milan 4-2 Slavia Prague (02:36): Christian Pulisic gets another player sent off and scores… but was it his goal to score? Berhalter ahead of CNL (12:34): Realistic expectations for Gio Reyna; a potential return for Tyler Adams?; where does Brandon Vazquez stand? W Gold Cup (31:04): Sandra Herrera of the Attacking Third podcast talks USWNT, water-logged soccer, the threat Brazil poses. Weekend preview (45:12): LDLT at the Bernabeu, Kevin Paredes versus unbeaten Leverkusen. CONACACAF Power Rankings (51:08): How come Liga MX clubs dominate the Top 10?  Call It What You Want is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Call It What You Want team on X: @JimmyConrad, @CharlieDavies9, @jessemarsch For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ You can also watch Call It What You Want on the CBS Sports Golazo Network for free on connected TVs and mobile devices through the CBS Sports app, Pluto TV, and on CBSSports.com as well as Paramount+. Watch UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Europa Conference League, Serie A, Coppa Italia, CONCACAF Nations League, W Gold Cup, NWSL, USL, Scottish Premiership, Brasileiro, Argentine Primera División, AFC Champion League by subscribing to Paramount+ Sign up to the Golazo newsletter, your ultimate guide to the Beautiful Game as our experts take you beyond the pitch and around the globe with news that matters. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast
The U.S. Open Cup compromise | USMNT CNL what ifs | Matarazzo's Bundesliga development (Soccer 3/4)

In Soccer We Trust: A U.S. Soccer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2024 59:42


It's official, only eight MLS teams will compete in the 2024 U.S. Open Cup. Jimmy Conrad, Charlie Davies and Jesse Marsch discuss the Major League Soccer-U.S. Soccer power dynamic as uncertainty hangs over the future of the country's oldest club competition. Plus, Gregg Berhalter's Nations League midfield options, Christian Pulisic's mastery of the dark arts, flowers for Pellegrino Matarazzo, and the greatest USMNT of all time!   New look Open Cup (05:55): MLS breaks from tradition as Leagues Cup gets full participation. CNL lineup questions (16:25): What if no Adams or McKennie? Should Tillman start over Gio? Americans Abroad (30:14): Pulisic outsmarts Lazio, Charlie endorses Sargent, Malik on target. Coach in focus (42:51): Matarazzo has Hoffenheim dreaming of Europe.   Leaked kits (53:45): What is the best ever USMNT jersey?  Call It What You Want is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Call It What You Want team on X: @JimmyConrad, @CharlieDavies9, @jessemarsch For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ You can also watch Call It What You Want on the CBS Sports Golazo Network for free on connected TVs and mobile devices through the CBS Sports app, Pluto TV, and on CBSSports.com as well as Paramount+. Watch UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Europa Conference League, Serie A, Coppa Italia, CONCACAF, Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, NWSL, Scottish Premiership, Brasileiro, Argentine Primera División, AFC Champion League by subscribing to Paramount+ Sign up to the Golazo newsletter, your ultimate guide to the Beautiful Game as our experts take you beyond the pitch and around the globe with news that matters. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices