The lowest common multiple of the denominators of a set of fractions
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Jeremy Abramson lost his dream job and found out his girlfriend had been cheating on him in the same week. He was 23, had no plan, and drove cross-country to Miami in a Honda CRV. He slept in his car for 9 nights Today, he coaches top executives and entrepreneurs on mindset, movement, and purpose and hosts one of the most talked-about Shabbat dinners in Miami. In this episode of Common Denominator, Moshe Popack sits down with Jeremy for one of the most honest conversations about what it actually means to be lost and how you find your way back. What you'll take away: - Why having everything still feels like nothing - How Jeremy rebuilt after losing everything at 23 - Why Shabbat is the most powerful reset you're not doing - The real root cause of the loneliness epidemic - How to attract the right partner and the right life - Why masculine and feminine polarity matters more than ever ◾️ Timestamp00:00 – Why people have everything but feel empty 03:00 – Loneliness epidemic: the root cause 06:00 – Shabbat dinners and the power of real connection 12:00 – Jeremy's story: fired, cheated on, broke at 23 14:00 – Finding God in the darkest moment 17:00 – Surrender, faith, and the pressure to provide 22:00 – Moshe's story: betting everything in 2010 27:00 – How to attract what you want in life 31:00 – Masculine vs feminine energy in 2026 35:00 – Extreme delegation and running life like a business 38:00 – Breaking generational trauma 41:00 – What's missing most from relationships today 47:00 – How to go inward: practical first steps 51:00 – Moving to Surfside and rebuilding from scratch 55:00 – Jeremy's full story: Bay Area to Miami
Roland Peralta had $500 in the bank, a bankruptcy on his record, and rheumatoid arthritis flaring up. What he also had was a formula he'd developed in his rent-controlled apartment one that accidentally started regrowing his hair. That formula became Nutrafol. The #1 dermatologist recommended hair growth supplement in the U.S. Acquired by Unilever. In this episode of Common Denominator, Moshe Popack sits down with Roland to unpack the full journey from Colombian immigrant roots and a failed fashion company, to building a billion-dollar brand, to using his exit to take on corporate polluters through a democratized litigation platform called When Justice. What you'll take away: - How a personal health crisis became a billion-dollar idea - Why Roland bet on a clinical study with almost no cash - How they sold to Unilever while keeping 51% of the company - Why most founders who exit end up miserable - What it means to build from a mindset of abundance - How When Justice is democratizing corporate accountability - Why purpose and profit don't have to be in conflict◾️Timestamp:0:00 Growing Up With Nothing And Why That Was the Advantage4:30 15 Years in Fashion and the Morning He Walked Away10:00 I Left $10M on the Table Then Lost Everything Else15:30 Arthritis, Hair Loss, and the Discovery That Started a Billion-Dollar Brand21:00 $50K, a Handshake, and 18-Hour Days How Nutrafol Was Born26:30 The Tequila Night They Decided to Build a Billion-Dollar Company31:30 13 Suitors, 51% Control, and Selling to Unilever36:30 Why Most Founders Are Miserable After the Exit39:30 When Justice: A GoFundMe to Sue Corporations43:00 How to Get Involved whenjustice.org
In 2009, Moshe Popack had no job, no income, three kids, and all his savings in a wedding envelope. That was the moment he understood something nobody tells you: nobody is coming to save you. In this episode of Common Denominator, Moshe breaks down the mindset that took him from that moment to building a real estate portfolio of 4,000+ units and what it has to do with the loneliness epidemic, the discipline gap, and the way you spend your nights and weekends. If you're a Miami-Dade local feeling the pressure of a city that's changing faster than your income can keep up this one's for you. But the message goes further than any zip code.What you'll hear:Why motivation is a trap and discipline is the only answerThe pen-and-paper exercise that reveals your real North StarWhat a Starbucks in Tokyo taught him about Miami's futureWhy working for free for one year might be the best investment you make◾️Timestamp00:00 The moment nobody's coming01:26 Why discipline is the only answer02:28 The pen-and-paper exercise that reveals who you are04:11 The Starbucks in Tokyo and the loneliness epidemic05:12 Your network is your net worthCommon Denominator is a show about how the people who build lasting wealth actually think and what that means for your money and your life.
Gavin Creel was a beloved member of the tightknit Broadway community, and the industry is still grieving his death in 2024 at the age of 48. Two Bridge is a company dedicated to creating content and cultural events that focus on mental wellness, including “Common Denominator,” a series that profiles performers and their mental health journeys. Two Bridge founder Harris Schwartzberg discusses his relationship with Gavin Creel, who was the featured guest of the series' pilot episode, and what he learned from filming with him. Visit Two Bridge's website, and provide your email to receive a code to watch Gavin Creel's episode of ‘Common Denominator,' available through this Friday. Photo by Bruce Glikas/WireImage via Getty: Gavin Creel during the Opening Night Gala for the Encores production curtain call for "Into The Woods" at New York City Center on May 4, 2022 in New York City. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Most founders fail not because of their idea.They fail because of who they are.Lew Frankfort built Coach from $6M to $5B over 35 years and now invests in early-stage founders. In this episode of Common Denominator, he breaks down the founder mindset, the leadership frameworks, and the hard lessons behind scaling a business from the ground up including why ego kills more companies than bad ideas, how to find investable ounders, and what it really takes to build an enduring brand.Timestamps:00:00 – Introduction & Background03:15 – What Makes a Founder Actually Scalable?05:20 – Why Most Ideas Never Become Businesses06:30 – The Rare Founder: Creativity + Business Acumen08:50 – Ego vs. Coachability10:50 – Building the Right Team (and Letting Go)14:15 – From NYC Government to Coach18:15 – Fear, Imposter Syndrome, and Leadership Pressure21:30 – How to Hire for Emotional Intelligence24:00 – The Problem with Modern Business Models26:30 – Losing and Regaining Momentum (“Mojo”)29:00 – Mental Health, Purpose, and Longevity30:30 – Building a Collaborative Culture32:30 – What Lew Is Most Proud Of32:50 – The Early Insight That Changed Everything34:13 – Final Thoughts: Purpose & Giving Back
The Love, Happiness and Success Podcast With Dr. Lisa Marie Bobby
“We talk all the time, but I still feel alone in my marriage.” If that sentence has ever crossed your mind on a Tuesday night, mid-load of dishes, with your partner three feet away, you are not imagining it. And you are not the only one. In this episode, I sit down with Debra Fileta, the licensed therapist who has spent more than twenty years in clinical practice helping couples figure out exactly this. Debra is the author of nine books and the host of the nationally syndicated podcast Talk To Me, and her newest book, People Skills, is built around an idea that I think is going to be a relief for a lot of you. Most relationship pain is not a love problem. It is a skill problem. And skills can be built. In This Episode The three levels of communication, and why almost every couple stalls at level two without realizing it Why “we talk all the time” is not the same thing as feeling close, even after twenty years of marriage The thirty-minute weekly ritual Debra and her husband John have used for fifteen years to keep their marriage from drifting Why being “nice” is not the same as having strong people skills, and the people-pleasing trap that masquerades as kindness How to tell the difference between a one-time conflict and a relationship pattern that is pointing at something deeper The volume-dial reframe for couples where one partner feels everything at a 7 and the other at a 3 The empathy practice that takes thirty seconds and changes the way you see almost everyone in your life Why “I keep attracting the wrong people” is the wrong question, and the better one Debra asks instead Why This Matters This episode is for anyone who has caught themselves thinking, something has shifted between us and I cannot put my finger on what. For the partner who feels like they are always the one initiating real conversation. For the couple who used to talk for hours and now mostly talks about logistics. For anyone who has wondered if needing more depth in their marriage is asking too much. It is not. And the way back is more learnable than you might think. Episode Breakdown 02:30 It is Not a Lack of Love, It is a Lack of Skill 06:30 Patterns vs. Pain Points (How to Tell If You Are the Common Denominator) 10:30 Why You Keep Attracting the Wrong People (And How to Change Your “Magnet”) 14:00 The Three Levels of Communication: Why Most Couples Never Get Past Level Two 17:30 Duck Floaty or Scuba Diver? The Sunday Night Check-In That Saved a Marriage 23:00 When One of You Feels Everything at a 7 and the Other at a 3 29:30 The Yalom Story: How to Actually Look Out Your Partner's Window 33:00 Trauma Does Not Excuse Us, But It Does Explain Us Resources Free Communication Training (two-part video plus workbook) Work with a couples counselor or relationship coach on my team If something in this conversation lands somewhere specific for you, that is the signal to do something with it. Start with the free communication training at growingself.com/communication. It is two short videos and a workbook, and you can do it this weekend. And if you want to go a little deeper, we do free first conversations at growingself.com. No pressure, no commitment, just a real conversation about what is actually going on in your relationship and whether what we do here might be a fit. I will see you back on the podcast soon. xo, Dr. Lisa Marie Bobby Growing Self Special thanks to this month's sponsors of the podcast Upwork — When you need specialized talent fast, Upwork gives you access to vetted professionals across 125+ categories, from marketing to web development to operations support. No long recruiting cycles. No guesswork. Just the right person, when you need them. Check it out at upwork.com — posting a job is free. Shopify — The all-in-one platform for building and growing your online business. Visit shopify.com/lhs to explore their tools and access exclusive listener discounts. OSEA — Amazing, clean, science-backed skincare made with the power of the sea. Use code LHS at oseamalibu.com for 10% off your first order. Quince — Quality products you'll actually use that feel like luxury without the price tag. Get free shipping and 365-day returns at quince.com/lhs. LNutra Prolon — A science-backed, plant-based nutrition program that supports fat loss, metabolism, cellular rejuvenation, and overall longevity. Head to ProlonLife.com/LHS for 15% off your first order + a bonus gift.
What does it take to build real conviction when nothing is handed to you?In this episode of Common Denominator, I sit down with Jay Roberts, founder of Prosper Group, for a conversation that starts with adoption, adversity, and identity—and expands into ambition, resilience, and the future of Miami real estate. Jay shares how being born in South Korea, adopted into a modest American household, and growing up feeling like an outsider shaped the work ethic and entrepreneurial drive behind his success.We get into the mindset behind betting on yourself, leaving the comfort of a strong career, raising capital, building in Miami, and why Jay believes waterfront real estate—and neighborhoods like North Bay Village—still hold major upside. We also talk interest rates, global capital, Miami's evolution, and what separates long-term winners from everyone else chasing the moment.This is a conversation about drive, timing, belief, and building something bigger than yourself.Timestamps:00:00 The Rise of Miami's Real Estate Market01:44 Jay Roberts: A Journey from Adoption to Success07:38 Transitioning to Real Estate: The Entrepreneurial Spirit10:43 The North Bay Village Development12:37 Miami's Real Estate Landscape: Supply and Demand14:07 The Future of Miami: A Global Market18:26 Construction Challenges and Opportunities20:06 Property Taxes and Government Policies22:07 Interest Rates and Their Impact on Real Estate24:49 Miami's Growth: A Bright Future Ahead27:39 International Investment in Miami's Real Estate29:39 Debt Market Dynamics in Miami31:07 Buyer Protections and Market StabilityLike this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
A movie. A mountain getaway. A guy who planned the whole trip and still looked her in the eyes and said, "we're not dating." Krysta watched this play out on screen and felt something click — because she's lived a version of it, her friends have lived versions of it, and the truth underneath it is uncomfortable but clarifying: at some point, you stopped being a passive observer and became an active participant. In this episode we dive into:• Why the "trip" was never the problem — and what actually forced the clarity• How staying in situations that don't serve you is a choice, even when it doesn't feel like one• The shift Krysta made that led directly to her current relationship• How this same pattern shows up in your fitness journey, your career, and everywhere else you feel stuckThe Part Nobody Talks About• You're on a weekend trip, having deep conversations, cooking dinner together — and somehow the conversation about what you actually are never happened• The signals felt clear. The actions felt like confirmation. But without the words, you were both operating from different scripts entirely• The relationship wasn't sabotaged by the trip — the trip just forced the conversation you'd both been avoiding• Clarity feels confronting because it is. But vagueness is the thing that's actually costing youWhere Complicity Actually Starts• It starts before the trip. Before date three. It starts with the dating app profile that says "open to seeing where things go" — and you swiping right anyway• Every "yes" to another date, another text thread, another situation that felt a little off but not off enough is a vote for the dynamic you say you don't want• The ego keeps you in it — you like the attention, you convince yourself you're being open-minded, you wait to see if they'll come around• Asking "why does he keep texting me if he doesn't want a relationship?" misses the point entirely: because you keep respondingWhat Actually Changes Things• Getting crystal clear on what you want — not in theory, but clear enough to say it out loud on a first date, with your chest• Asking "would my husband do this?" and actually meaning it as a filter, not a formality• Stopping the minute something doesn't line up — not dramatically, not with a speech, just quietly removing yourself• The same principle that cleaned up Krysta's dating life is the same one that applies to your gym consistency, your meal prep, your career: stop participating in things you've already told yourself aren't a matchThis episode is a reminder that confusion is rarely the real issue — your actions have already been making the decision. Whether you're untangling a situationship, stalling on your fitness goals, or stuck in a professional situation that stopped serving you months ago, this episode gives you the framework to stop being complicit in outcomes you don't actually want.Want more on dating with intention? Check out Episode 18, "'Finding' Your Person Isn't the Point," where Krysta breaks down why clarity about who you are comes before clarity about who you want.Follow Krysta:Instagram:@thekrystahuber@thefitnessfyx@thespreadmktg
I couldn't stop thinking about this: the Pentagon is hiring investment bankers to deploy over $200 billion… and once you understand why, you start to see how the world really works.In this solo episode of Common Denominator, I break down what's actually happening behind that headline and why it has everything to do with your life, your money, and your future. This isn't just about defense or geopolitics. It's about capital allocation at the highest level and the mindset that separates reactive decision-making from disciplined, long-term thinking.From losing my job in 2009 to building and managing thousands of real estate units, I've learned that wealth isn't about being the smartest person in the room, it's about being the most consistent allocator of capital.And here's the truth: you're already doing it every day.Your time, your energy, your money, it's all capital.The question is: are you deploying it intentionally?In this episode, I cover:- Why the Pentagon is turning to investment bankers- What capital allocation really means (beyond money)- The difference between emotional vs. disciplined decision-making- How to think in decades, not days- Why consistency—not intelligence—builds lasting wealth- How values, faith, and responsibility shape long-term successLike this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominatorCommon Denominator PodcastWebsite: https://moshepopack.com/podcast/YouTube: @mpopackInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/mpopackFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/MoshePopackNewsletter: https://moshepopack.com/newsletter/
I lost my job in 2009. And with it, my income, my confidence, and my sense of identity.This isn't theory. This isn't strategy from a book. This is my real story. How I went from uncertainty during the financial crisis to building 4,000+ units and millions of square feet in real estate… one disciplined decision at a time.In this solo episode of Common Denominator, I break down the moment everything could have ended. And how it became the foundation for everything I've built since.Here's what you can expect: - What losing everything actually feels like (and why no one talks about it)- The mindset shift that changed everything- Why slow, disciplined real estate wins over hype- The truth about building wealth during uncertainty- Faith, family, and responsibility as driving forces- Exactly what I would do if I had to start over todayIf you're going through a tough moment—financially, mentally, or personally—this episode is for you.You're not behind. You're at the beginning.The common denominator is you.Like this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominatorCommon Denominator PodcastWebsite: https://moshepopack.com/podcast/YouTube: @mpopackInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/mpopackFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/MoshePopackNewsletter: https://moshepopack.com/newsletter/
AI is fueling a massive data center boom, but does America actually have the power to keep up?In this episode of Common Denominator, I sit down with Mark Mills to dig into one of the most pressing questions in the country right now: can our energy infrastructure truly support the rise of AI?Mark Mills is a physicist, energy expert, and author who focuses on how technologies like AI and data centers are grounded in real-world energy and infrastructure systems.As demand for data centers accelerates, I wanted to go beyond the headlines and understand what's really happening—at the intersection of technology, energy, infrastructure, and national security. Mark brings a clear, data-driven perspective as we break down the realities of the U.S. power grid, rising electricity demand, private power solutions, natural gas, nuclear energy, and what it will actually take to power the future of AI in America.In our conversation, we discuss: • Why AI is creating an unprecedented surge in data center demand • Whether the U.S. power grid can realistically keep up • Why location and proximity matter so much for data centers • The growing importance of private and off-grid power solutions • Why natural gas may be the most practical near-term answer • Whether nuclear can play a meaningful role over the next decade • The economic and political pushback surrounding data center development • Why this moment could be a major inflection point for AI infrastructureIf you're interested in AI, energy, infrastructure, investing, or the future of America's competitive edge, this is a conversation worth watching.Like this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominatorCommon Denominator PodcastWebsite: https://moshepopack.com/podcast/YouTube: @mpopackInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/mpopackFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/MoshePopackNewsletter: https://moshepopack.com/newsletter/
Send us Fan MailSpacemen, prepare to get controverted. Well, not really. In fact, I'm not even sure that's a word--or at least a word that can be used in this context. It didn't show up as misspelled, which seems to imply it's a word. Anyway, on today's show, we talk about 10 opinions from Mark Manson. To be honest, I don't find them that controversial, but I can see how they might be to some. I guess you'll have to listen in and see if you agree. And make sure you listen for our Tri-Tip at the end. It was almost a fork. Keywordsrelationships, love, marriage, relationship advice, controversial truths, long-term love, relationship myths, communication, personal growthKey topicsControversial relationship truthsMisconceptions about love and marriageManaging unresolved issues in long-term relationshipsSound bites"Healthy love feels boring, but that's okay.""Look for principles, not exact words.""Focus on understanding, not just fixing."Chapters00:00 Nostalgia for Comedy01:14 Cinematic Discussions03:43 Humor in Therapy05:23 The Reality of Relationships07:36 Controversial Truths in Love15:28 Attraction and Relationship Dynamics17:03 The Nature of Healthy Love21:52 Judging Partner Behavior24:24 The Common Denominator in Relationships28:43 Self-Reflection in Relationships32:02 Challenging Cultural Norms38:37 Engaging in Relationship Conversations ResourcesMark Manson - The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01N7Q0K7QSpread the word! The Manspace is Rad!!
What if the real question about crypto isn't what it is… but who you're trusting?In this episode of Common Denominator, I break down one of the biggest conversations happening right now: crypto, stablecoins, and the future of money.I'm not anti-crypto. I believe in innovation. But when it comes to money, trust is everything, and that's where this conversation gets more complicated than most people realize.Why are people moving away from traditional financial systems?What makes stablecoins seem “safe”?And most importantly… who's actually benefiting behind the scenes?I walk through:- Why trust in institutions is breaking down- How stablecoins really work (and how companies make money from them)- The hidden trade-offs of decentralization- What regulation could mean for the future of crypto- And the one question everyone should be asking before investing in anythingThis isn't about saying crypto is good or bad.It's about understanding the system—and thinking clearly before you trust it.Because the moment we stop asking questions… that's when the real problems begin.Like this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
Is government really designed to help people, or is the system more complicated than we think?In this episode of Common Denominator, I take a step back from politics and focus on something more important: how systems actually work in the real world.We're often taught that government programs exist to protect and support u, but when you look closer, questions start to emerge. Why does government spending tend to be so inefficient compared to the private sector? What happens when programs fail—but don't go away? And are we measuring success the right way?I break down:- Why government spending doesn't follow the same accountability as business- A surprising comparison between New York City and Florida budgets- The difference between short-term help and long-term opportunity- Why people are moving to places like Florida in record numbers- The real role government should play in a thriving societyThis isn't about being political—it's about being practical. Because if we want better outcomes, we need to understand what actually lifts people up.In my view, the answer isn't more control, it's more opportunity.Like this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
Too many people today feel constantly disappointed—by relationships, work, and life itself. One major reason? Expectation. In this solo episode of Common Denominator, I share a powerful idea that shapes how we experience happiness, disappointment, and purpose: our mindset. When we depend on external things like success, recognition, or other people to make us happy, our happiness becomes fragile.Drawing on insights from Viktor Frankl, author of Man's Search for Meaning, I explore a simple but profound truth: The one thing no one can take away from you is your ability to choose how you respond to what happens.In this episode, I talk about:- Why expectations often lead to disappointment- Viktor Frankl vs. Freud on what truly drives human behavior- Why meaning matters more than pleasure- How purpose and gratitude reshape your mindset- Why struggle is often part of discovering your purposeLike this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
What's actually happening in housing right now, and why don't the headlines tell the full story?In this episode of Common Denominator, I sit down with Richard Ross to break down what's really driving today's rental and housing market. We get into why multifamily occupancy is dropping even as the country faces a housing shortage, how demographics are reshaping demand, and why more renters are moving away from traditional apartments.Richard walks me through the rise of built-to-rent single-family communities, why three- and four-bedroom rentals are in such high demand, and how affordability, lifestyle, and flexibility are changing renter behavior. We talk interest rates, the lock-in effect, institutional ownership narratives, and where real opportunities may exist as stress builds across commercial real estate.In this episode, you'll learn: - Why apartment occupancy is falling despite housing shortages- How demographics are reshaping rental demand- Why renters are choosing single-family homes over apartments- The real math behind renting versus owning today- Why interest rates don't work the way most people think- How flexibility and lifestyle now drive housing decisions- Where pressure — and opportunity — may emerge in real estateTimestamps:00:00 – Why housing data feels contradictory01:05 – Demographic shifts impacting apartments03:09 – The built-to-rent single-family model06:57 – Renting vs owning: the real numbers07:52 – Institutional ownership and political narratives11:30 – Renters by choice and lifestyle flexibility12:36 – Creating real community in rental housing15:59 – How far people are willing to live from work17:44 – Why mortgage rates don't follow the Fed20:35 – Where opportunity may emerge nextLike this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
n this episode of Business Brain, we dig into a truth many entrepreneurs miss: selling starts long before the transaction. We explore how personality is one of the most powerful sales tools we have—whether we're selling beer at a baseball game, handmade goods at a craft fair, or podcast ads. Humor, scarcity, and helpful tips all trigger the law of reciprocity, building trust and momentum before the ask even happens. When we lean into authentic connection, selling stops feeling pushy and starts feeling natural—another step toward building our Charmed Life. We also break down the danger of operating at the slowest common denominator inside a business. Just like a band can only move as fast as its least prepared member, companies stall when systems, partners, or team members lag behind. We talk through how to recognize these friction points and raise the standard so the entire organization can move faster, smarter, and more profitably. 00:00:00 Business Brain – The Entrepreneurs' Podcast #734 for Wednesday Casual FridAI, March 11, 2026 00:01:04 March 11th: World Plumbing Day 00:02:37 Always be learning about selling! Selling isn't about the last part of the transaction, it's about the first. You need to have your personality in your business Selling beer at baseball games…with humor! Selling trinkets at a craft fair… with scarcity! Selling podcast ads… with a helpful tip about free music! The law of reciprocity Sponsors 00:11:14 SPONSOR: Shopify – For anyone to sell anywhere, sign up for a one-dollar-per month trial period at Shopify.com/BusinessBrain and upgrade your selling today! 00:12:34 SPONSOR: Intuit QuickBooks Payroll is evolving beyond pay runs to support how you hire, onboard, manage, and retain your team. Learn more by visiting QuickBooks.com/workforce 00:13:57 Bands and Businesses – Slowest Common Denominator How do you address this in your business? 00:23:43 Business Brain 734 Outtro Tell Your Friends! Review Business Brain Subscribe to the show feedback@businessbrain.show Call/Text: (567) 274-6977 X/Twitter: @ShannonJean & @DaveHamilton, & @BizBrainShow LinkedIn: Shannon Jean, Dave Hamilton, & Business Brain Facebook: Dave Hamilton, Shannon Jean, & Business Brain The post Personality and the Slowest Common Denominator – Business Brain 734 appeared first on Business Brain - The Entrepreneurs' Podcast.
What if the most powerful platforms in the world were not built on attention, algorithms, or followers but on something much deeper? In this episode, Kalena James reveals the hidden principle connecting the world's most influential digital platforms: safety.After exploring how YouTube supports learning, Amazon supports decision making, and Facebook supports belonging, Kalena uncovers the deeper common denominator driving them all. For women leaders everywhere, this insight changes everything. Real influence is not built on attention or noise. It is built on trust.What You Will Learn:How the world's biggest platforms meet a shared human emotional need.Why psychological safety is the true currency behind search, learning, and connection.What YouTube, Amazon, and Facebook reveal about human behavior and trust.How safety influences decision making, learning, and belonging online.Why women often create powerful leadership environments without recognizing it.How tone, clarity, and consistency create trust in leadership and communication.What real influence looks like in a world driven by human psychology rather than algorithms.FAQ:What is psychological safety in leadership?Psychological safety refers to environments where people feel comfortable sharing ideas, asking questions, and learning without fear of embarrassment or criticism. Leaders who create this environment build stronger trust and engagement.Why is safety important for influence and authority?Influence grows when people trust the space you create. When individuals feel calm, respected, and supported, they are more open to learning, making decisions, and following leadership.How can leaders create safety in their communities or organizations?Leaders create safety through consistent communication, clear messaging, emotional regulation, and an environment where people feel respected and valued.Learn more about the latest tool for dynamic professionals in the self-improvement industry, LyfQuest. A mobile CRM platform that's uniquely made for you!Learn more at: https://lyfquest.io/Instagram:USW Podcast @uswkokomoKalena James @yesitskalenajamesJulie Deem @indymompreneur--------------------------------------------------USW Kokomo WebsiteProduction by The Business Podcast Editor
What does it actually take to live as your authentic self — especially when it costs you friendships, comfort, and approval?In this episode of Common Denominator, I sit down with Kayla Schreibstein for a deeply honest conversation about identity, courage, belonging, and what it means to stand for who you are when it would be easier to blend in.Kayla shares her journey growing up disconnected from her Jewish identity, the moment October 7th forced her to confront who she really was, and the heartbreak of losing close friendships over deeply held beliefs. We talk about what it means to choose authenticity over people-pleasing, why community matters more than ever, and how showing up publicly can become a source of healing — not just for yourself, but for others.We explore faith, culture, boundaries, fear, self-doubt, and the pressure young women feel to stay quiet or agreeable. This episode is about finding your voice, owning your story, and realizing that purpose doesn't come from validation — it comes from alignment.This conversation is a reminder that you don't reach your full potential until you stop hiding who you are.In this episode, you'll learn: - Why authenticity often comes at a personal cost- How losing friends can clarify who you really are- What it means to own your identity publicly- Why community is the antidote to isolation- How self-doubt shows up — even in confident people- Why people-pleasing keeps you stuck- How young women can step into their voice and power- Why purpose matters more than money or approvalFollow Kayla Schreibstein: https://www.instagram.com/kay_schreibsFriends of Kayla podcast: https://linktr.ee/friendsofkaylaFriends of Kayla instagram: https://www.instagram.com/friendsofkaylaTimestamps:00:00 – Choosing purpose over chasing money01:00 – Rejecting identity and the fear of being different03:00 – October 7th and losing close friendships06:30 – Agreeing to disagree — and when it fails09:00 – Division, narrative, and the cost of hatred12:00 – Building community through culture and tradition14:30 – Showing up publicly despite fear16:30 – Women, confidence, and self-doubt18:30 – Boundaries, people-pleasing, and personal freedom20:30 – Final reflections on authenticity and growthLike this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
What would you do if you lost your job, faced a massive lawsuit, and risked losing everything you built?In this solo episode of Common Denominator, I open up about one of the hardest moments of my life — being hit with a major judgment right after I started making money again. It could have set us back emotionally for a decade. Instead, my wife and I made a decision: we would pay it… and move on.Because here's the truth — the only control you ever really have is your reaction.I share what 15 years of Jiu-Jitsu, the philosophy of the samurai, Bruce Lee, and Viktor Frankl have taught me about emotional discipline, fear, and resilience. Fear is almost always false evidence appearing real. Less than 1% of what we fear actually happens — if we don't give up.In this episode, I talk about:- Why choosing a life partner is the biggest (and riskiest) decision you'll ever make- How to handle financial setbacks without letting them define your future- The power of breathing before reacting- Training your nervous system to stay calm in chaos- Why most people stay stuck — and how to break the cycle- The mental block that keeps you from writing down your biggest goals- Why underdogs win- Burning the boats and creating “no choice” situationsWe're all changing. Your partner is changing. Your business will rise and fall. The world will distract you. The question is: can you regulate yourself when it matters most?When everything feels insane — breathe. Take one step. Then another.That's the training. That's the work. That's the common denominator.If this episode resonates, subscribe and share it with someone who needs the reminder: you are stronger than your fear.Like this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
Song Talk Radio | Songwriting Tips | Lyrics | Arranging | Live Feedback
Geneviève Racette talks about taking a personal experience and writing it into an accessible pop song. Download the lyrics to Common Denominator to follow along. We talked about: Writing from personal experience but making your song open to others Capturing an idea as soon as you can, even if it occurs in your sleep or in the shower Using the bridge as a way to redirect the narrative What's up with long, wordy choruses in modern pop songs?… Read the rest
What actually separates people who say they want hard things from those who follow through for years?In this episode of Common Denominator, I sit down with endurance athlete Mark Dowdle for a deep conversation on discipline, faith, suffering, and what it really takes to do difficult things over long periods of time.Mark shares where his mindset comes from, why consistency—not motivation—is the real differentiator, and how his relationship with faith reshaped his identity after chasing validation through extreme physical challenges. He opens up about running the Calendar Club challenge for an entire year, racing in life-threatening conditions at Arrowhead 135, and the moment he realized that external praise was never going to fill the void.Mark and I explore the psychology of quitting, the inner dialogue that convinces people to stop just before a breakthrough, and why no one accomplishes hard things alone. From the importance of choosing the right life partner to the role of accountability, truth-telling, and surrender, this conversation is a grounded look at what sustained excellence actually requires.This episode is a reminder that discipline isn't about feeling ready — it's about showing up anyway.In This Episode, You'll Learn:- Why some people are drawn to hard things—and how that mindset is shaped early- How redefining failure changes everything- The difference between real danger and mental excuses- Why external validation eventually collapses- How faith reframes suffering, purpose, and discipline- Why motivation is unreliable—and discipline is required- The role of accountability, partners, and “truth tellers”- Why consistency is the true common denominator of high performersTimestamps:02:39 – Redefining Failure03:47 – Validation, High Goals & Dropout Points04:47 – Shifting Identity Away from External Praise06:00 – Faith, Purpose & Olympic-Level Emptiness08:23 – Calendar Club Challenge & Expectation Collapse10:15 – Surrender, Entitlement & Freedom12:24 – Pushing the Line Between Discomfort and Danger14:28 – Inner Dialogue, Fear & Presence16:00 – Accountability, Marriage & Not Quitting18:11 – Love, Truth & Saying the Hard Thing21:12 – Discipline vs Motivation23:22 – Confidence Through Evidence25:10 – The True Common Denominator: Consistency26:19 – Final Reflections & Sign-OffLike this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
In this episode of Common Denominator, I share two powerful biblical lessons that completely shaped how I think about wealth, business, and personal growth.Growing up, the stories of Abraham and Nachshon stood out to me. Abraham left everything familiar and walked into the unknown. Nachshon stepped into the sea before it split.Both stories teach the same lesson: if you follow the crowd, you'll get average results.Real growth — whether in business, investing, or life — comes from going against the grain. It comes from choosing discomfort. It comes from building slowly and steadily instead of chasing hype.I also talk about why emotional investing never works long term, why retail investors often get hurt during hype cycles, and why knowing your numbers is the foundation of real financial success.If you want long-term wealth, stability, and fulfillment, you have to be willing to take the road less traveled.Growth only happens when we're uncomfortable.Subscribe for more conversations about wealth, mindset, discipline, and long-term success.Like this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
What happens when fear—not ignorance—keeps people from building wealth?Tax expert and author Hannah Cole unpacks the real reasons so many people feel paralyzed around money, taxes, and financial decisions. We discuss how cultural conditioning and lack of education make taxes feel intimidating—especially for women and first-time founders—and why the system is often more flexible than people think.This conversation is about agency: understanding tax brackets, startup losses, and the difference between avoiding taxes and engaging strategically with them. At its core, it's a reframing of taxes—not as punishment, but as partnership. Because clarity, not fear, creates power.In this episode of Common Denominator with Moshe Popack, you'll learn: - Fear of numbers is a common issue that many face.- Tax literacy can empower individuals to take control of their finances.- The tax code is designed for humans, not robots.- There is a significant lack of tax education in schools.- Understanding tax brackets can prevent unnecessary fear.- The IRS is generally accommodating if approached honestly.- Business ownership offers significant tax advantages.- The government prioritizes economic growth through business support.- Many wealthy individuals evade taxes, creating a fairness issue.- Education is key to reducing fear and increasing tax compliance.Timestamps: 00:00 Understanding the Fear of Money02:48 The Importance of Tax Literacy06:03 Debunking Tax Myths and Fears09:10 Strategies for Tax Efficiency12:10 The Role of Government in Taxation15:06 Future of Work and Taxes18:07 Empowering Through Education21:01 The Fairness of the Tax SystemLike this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
In this episode of Common Denominator, I break down one of the most extraordinary leadership stories of our time: Jensen Huang and NVIDIA.Over the last 36 months, NVIDIA has added roughly $100 billion in market cap per month, growing from a $300 billion company to nearly $4.5 trillion. But numbers like that don't happen by accident. They're the result of leadership.In this episode, I explore what kind of leadership it actually takes to build a company like NVIDIA — and what we can all learn from Jensen Huang's 32-year tenure as CEO.Here's what I dive into:- Why leadership compounds over time- The power of thinking in decades, not quarters- Why betting early on AI, GPUs, and CUDA looked irrational — but wasn't- How staying technically fluent at scale protects standards and speed- Why calm is one of the most underrated leadership traits- The difference between managing outcomes and managing direction- How great companies become infrastructure the world can't function withoutOn Common Denominator, I always ask: what's the real force behind extraordinary outcomes? More often than not, it's leadership. Not the title — the substance.Whether you're building a startup, leading a team, investing, or simply trying to lead yourself better, the lessons are the same:Think longer.Stay close to the work.Build for where the world is going.Don't let success dilute conviction.Jensen Huang didn't just build NVIDIA. He demonstrated what leadership looks like in an era of exponential change.And to me, that's the real common denominator.Like this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
Build a stronger, more connected relationship with Paired for 25% off a yearly plan plus a 7-day free trial.“The common denominator in all my failed relationships is me… so I must be the problem.”It sounds logical. It's also massively biased.In this episod, I break down why that conclusion doesn't hold up, the two other common denominators you're ignoring (hint: people and a broken world), and the missing data point that changes everything: you don't actually know your “relationship success rate” compared to anyone else—because you only see your failures, not theirs.I talk about:why hurt is inevitable in real relationshipswhy repair is the real definition of “safe”how confirmation bias and minimization distort your self-imagewhy a relationship ending ≠ a relationship “failing”the “home runs vs at-bats” analogy that makes this click fastIf you've been using relationships as evidence that you're unlovable or broken—this is a necessary reset.If my podcast has helped, my new book, The Light Between the Leaves, goes even deeperNext Steps:
Most people don't have a money problem — they have a thinking problem.In this episode of Common Denominator, I sit down with economist Laurence Kotlikoff – Boston University professor and creator of MaxiFi financial planning – to unpack the biggest lie we tell ourselves about our financial lives: that we don't need to look… and it'll all work out.Laurence explains why so many of us avoid our numbers (fear, superstition, math phobia), why much of Wall Street's “standard advice” conflicts with real economics, and why personal finance is far more complicated than people realize — from taxes and inflation to Social Security's 22,000-page rulebook. We talk through what it actually takes to answer the simplest question that drives everything: How much can I safely spend — and keep spending — without running out?We also zoom out to the macro questions people feel every day: whether Social Security could be cut, whether AI has created a market bubble, how panic can move markets even when fundamentals don't, what housing really means as an inflation hedge, and why inflation hurts households so differently depending on how their income and assets are structured.This conversation is a reminder that “having your finances straight” isn't about luck, hype, or perfect timing — it's about getting clear, making sustainable decisions, and using the right tools to avoid leaving massive money on the table.In this episode you'll learn:- The biggest lie people tell themselves about money — and why it's so common- Why personal finance isn't “simple math” (and why most people freeze anyway)- How to think about spending safely if you live to 100- What a 23% Social Security benefit cut could mean — and how to plan around it- Why many households make the wrong Social Security decision and lose big- Whether AI stocks are overvalued — and how bubbles (and panic) form- How the market can drop hard even without “fundamental” reasons- When buying a home makes sense vs. renting — and what people miss- Why inflation burns some people and spares others (and how to protect yourself)- The “common denominator” of people who actually stay financially secureLike this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominatorChapters:00:00 The Biggest Lie We Tell Ourselves About Money02:23 Welcome + Why We Avoid Our Finances05:10 Why Financial Planning Is So Complicated07:34 Math Phobia, Behavioral Avoidance, and Real Solutions11:23 Social Security “Running Out” + Planning for Benefit Cuts14:54 AI, Market Valuations, and Bubble Risk19:50 Panic, Multiple Equilibria, and Why Markets Crash22:06 Real Estate: When to Buy and How to Think About Risk25:22 Housing as an Inflation Hedge27:26 Money Supply, Inflation, and What People Feel Day-to-Day32:13 America's Debt, Fiscal Solvency, and Unfunded Liabilities34:44 Practical Solutions + “You're Hired” Reforms41:50 The Common Denominator of Financial Stability44:11 Final Takeaways + Where to Find LaurenceFollow Laurence:Website: Kotlikoff.netNewsletter: https://larrykotlikoff.substack.com/ MaxiFi: https://www.maxifi.com/ Book: Money Magic https://www.amazon.com/Money-Magic-Economists-Secrets-Better/dp/0316541958
In this solo episode of Common Denominator, I speak honestly—without tiptoeing, without trying to provoke, and without apologizing for having values.I believe in morality. I believe in freedom. And I don't believe those things are supposed to be at odds with each other.Somewhere along the way, “live and let live” started to mean staying silent, hiding your beliefs, or walking on eggshells to avoid disagreement. I don't agree with that. Freedom goes both ways—you get to be you, and I get to be me—and neither of us has to cancel the other out for that to work.This episode isn't about politics. It's about how we're actually living.I talk about the loss of real community in a world that's more connected than ever, and why performative connection, social media, and constant screens are leaving people lonelier, not closer. I share a powerful experience through my 17-year-old son, who organically brought together over 100 people—no phones, no agenda, no branding—just real human connection. What happened that night says a lot about what we're missing.We don't need more content. We need more context.We don't need more outrage. We need more grounding.And we don't need more rules about what we're allowed to say—we need more spaces where people are allowed to be human.This episode is about honesty, freedom, community, and why avoiding hard conversations is more dangerous than having them. It's about listening instead of trying to win—and finding the overlap that connects us all.If you believe you shouldn't have to hide who you are to respect others, this conversation is for you.Timestamps:00:00 Why honesty feels controversial02:20 What real community actually looks like04:50 The cost of performative connection07:15 Freedom, values, and the common denominatorLike this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
What happens when life shatters — and there's no roadmap for putting it back together?Theo Boyd, author, grief educator, and host of the Think Deal podcast, joins me to explore grief not as something to “get over,” but as something we learn to live with.Theo shares her personal story of devastating loss — the tragic accident that took her mother's life, followed years later by her father's suicide — and how those experiences reshaped her faith, identity, and understanding of hope. We unpack why grief looks different for everyone, why comparison silences healing, and how presence may be the most sacred response to pain.Theo reframes hope not as optimism or positivity, but as a practice that arrives in its own time. From learning to “say the words that carry the weight of pain,” to finding meaning through service, hobbies, and love after loss, this conversation is a powerful reminder that grief may be one of humanity's truest common denominators.In this episode you'll learn:- Why grief is not something you move past — but something you learn to live with- How comparison and advice can unintentionally silence grievers- Why hope doesn't show up early — and why that's okay- The difference between meaning and purpose after loss- How presence can be the most powerful form of healing- Why serving others is often the doorway back to life- How love, faith, and purpose can exist after devastation- Why grief may be one of our greatest shared human experiencesLike this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominatorChapters:00:00 The Journey of Grief and Resilience03:09 Understanding Grief as a Constant Companion05:52 The Impact of Loss on Life and Relationships08:51 Finding Purpose Through Pain12:08 The Importance of Individual Grief Experiences14:48 Hope: A Journey from Darkness to Light17:45 Integrating Hope into Daily Life21:02 Spirituality and Grief: Finding Meaning23:50 The Role of Presence in Healing27:11 Encouragement and Moving ForwardFollow Theo:Website: Thinktheo.comInstagram: @think_theo
Today's Song of the Day is “Common Denominator” by Geneviève Racette.
What if the goal of life wasn't comfort, success, or even happiness – but meaning?In this episode of Common Denominator, I sit down with Sann McCandless, a life and career coach who helps people design lives rooted in courage, intention, and self-trust. We explore why fear isn't something to overcome but something to walk alongside, how imposter syndrome is actually a sign of growth, and why the most meaningful lives are built in chapters – not linear paths.Sanni shares how intentional living starts with honest self-check-ins, why confidence isn't about ability but self-acceptance, and how nature plays a powerful role in regulating our nervous system and reconnecting us to presence. We also dive into relationships with high performers, parenting, and what it really means to live with perspective when life feels short and precious.This conversation is for anyone feeling stuck, burned out, or quietly craving a life that feels richer, braver, and more alive.In this episode you'll learn:- Why fear doesn't go away, and why that's okay- The real antidote to imposter syndrome- Why confidence is about self-acceptance, not competence- How nature restores presence and regulates the nervous system- The difference between comfort, meaning, and peak experiences- What courageous, intentional people truly have in common- How to live intentionally without being reckless or selfishIf you're questioning your path, your priorities, or what you actually want out of life — this episode will meet you right where you are.Like this episode? Leave a review here:https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominatorTimestamps:00:00 – Introduction & The Power of the Mind and Reality02:15 – Intentional Living: Crafting Meaningful Lives06:10 – Courage and Overcoming Fear10:12 – Navigating Imposter Syndrome13:04 – The Dynamics of High-Performance Relationships25:29 – Creating Community with OutWild28:37 – The Importance of Nature in Our Lives32:18 – Living with Courage and IntentionFollow Sanni: Instagram: @sannimccandlessLearn more about her work: linktr.ee/sannihonnold
After traveling through Japan, Hong Kong, Los Angeles, and Europe, I came home with a powerful realization: the United States—especially Florida—offers a level of opportunity, freedom, and growth that's hard to match anywhere else in the world.In this solo episode of Common Denominator, I reflect on what global travel revealed about:- Why economic conservatism can lead to stagnation- How Japan's financial system became a cautionary tale- Why parts of Europe feel stable but stuck- The realities of property investment, taxes, and growth abroad- And why Florida stands out with no state income tax, business-friendly policies, and massive inbound migrationWe talk GDP, global economies, population growth, and what it really means to live in a system designed for upward mobility and innovation.If you're thinking about where to live, invest, build a business, or raise a family, this episode offers perspective you can't get without stepping outside the U.S. bubble.Like this episode? Leave a review here: https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominator
Welcome to The Daily Wrap Up, an in-depth investigatory show dedicated to bringing you the most relevant independent news, as we see it, from the last 24 hours (12/17/25). As always, take the information discussed in the video below and research it for yourself, and come to your own conclusions. Anyone telling you what the truth is, or claiming they have the answer, is likely leading you astray, for one reason or another. Stay Vigilant. !function(r,u,m,b,l,e){r._Rumble=b,r[b]||(r[b]=function(){(r[b]._=r[b]._||[]).push(arguments);if(r[b]._.length==1){l=u.createElement(m),e=u.getElementsByTagName(m)[0],l.async=1,l.src="https://rumble.com/embedJS/u2q643"+(arguments[1].video?'.'+arguments[1].video:'')+"/?url="+encodeURIComponent(location.href)+"&args="+encodeURIComponent(JSON.stringify([].slice.apply(arguments))),e.parentNode.insertBefore(l,e)}})}(window, document, "script", "Rumble"); Rumble("play", {"video":"v70yuz6","div":"rumble_v70yuz6"}); Video Source Links (In Chronological Order): Support The Last American Vagabond Trump EPA Nearly Doubles Threshold for Safe Formaldehyde Exposure — ProPublica Susie Wiles, Trump's Chief of Staff, Criticizes Bondi and Vance in Candid Interviews - The New York Times New Tab (5) Mehdi (e/λ) on X: "I believe DARPA just launched the most audacious bioengineering program of the decade & nobody's talking about it loud enough I spent hours reading through the Generative Optogenetics program documentation & honestly I'm still processing the implications of what they're trying https://t.co/1Uh0VsUz8F" / X GO: Generative Optogenetics | DARPA Generative Optogenetics (GO) Overview - YouTube New Tab DARPA 'Generative Optogenetics (GO)' Seeks to Program Living Cells Using Light, Could Aid in 'Extended Human Spaceflight' Optogenetics and Targeted Gene Therapy for Retinal Diseases: Unravelling the Fundamentals, Applications, and Future Perspectives - PMC Optogenetic-controlled immunotherapeutic designer cells for post-surgical cancer immunotherapy | Nature Communications News: Optogenetics and mRNA Vaccines Net... (The Scientist) - Behind the headlines - NLM Optogenetics: We may soon be able to manipulate the mind with light - Genetic Literacy Project Coronavirus Gives a Dangerous Boost to DARPA's Darkest Agenda New Tab Can Magnetism Help Us Control the Brain, Remotely? - University at Buffalo Magnetogenetics and the Future of Remote Biological Control RFK Jr. wants everyone to use wearables. What are the benefits, risks? - ABC News Evaluating methods and protocols of ferritin-based magnetogenetics - ScienceDirect Efficacy of a Broadly Neutralizing SARS-CoV-2 Ferritin Nanoparticle Vaccine in Nonhuman Primates | bioRxiv Flipping a Switch Inside the Head - Seek : Seek Genetically engineered 'Magneto' protein remotely controls brain and behaviour | Science | The Guardian The field of neurogenetics: where it stands and where it is going - PMC Biodigital Convergence, COVID Magnetogenetic Ferritin Vaccines & Big Spikes In Mass Vaccinated Areas Bob Langer The Coronavirus "Common Denominator" Tied To Charles Lieber & Israel's NY "Smart Cities" Charles Lieber's nanoscale transistors can enter cells without harming them | Harvard Magazine Pfizer and BioNTech's COMIRNATY® Receives U.S. FDA Approval for Adults 65 and Older and Individuals Ages 5 through 64 at Increased Risk for Severe COVID-19 | Pfizer (8) John Beaudoin, Sr., The Real CdC, The Last Boomer on X: "Please repost How can they just ignore 18,000 kidney deaths in ONE state? @zoeharcombe @_Esther4_14 @Earthdriver @unhealthytruth @elonmusk @EmeraldRobinson @jqe22 @CartlandDavid @GenFlynn @thevivafrei @RobertKennedyJr @JimFergusonUK @LizGunnNZ @FluoridePoison @RepMTG" / X Trump Admin Leans Into Self-Amplifying mRNA (SamRNA) Under Guise Of Ending mRNA & RNA In Food New Tab (8) The Last American Vagabond on X: "With the #6G news, be sure to read @DBrozeLiveFree's article breaking down what this really means & how little they care about the health & environmental side effects—in fact they have baked into their bills that these factors cannot even be considered. https://t.co/ZNwOTZhMEy" / X Trump's FCC Seeks to Strip Even More Local Control Over 5G Rollout (8) ADAM on X: "BREAKING:
Joining me today is 7SEES, here to discuss his research regarding numerous technological developments and the implications for our future. We discuss Trump's recent 6G announcement and how 6G itself plays a major role in these developments, as well as the building out of the new technocratic society under the guise of "freedom cities" that the ruling elitists are openly signaling. We also break down the concern of nanotechnology in this 6G world and what may already be taking place around you. !function(r,u,m,b,l,e){r._Rumble=b,r[b]||(r[b]=function(){(r[b]._=r[b]._||[]).push(arguments);if(r[b]._.length==1){l=u.createElement(m),e=u.getElementsByTagName(m)[0],l.async=1,l.src="https://rumble.com/embedJS/u2q643"+(arguments[1].video?'.'+arguments[1].video:'')+"/?url="+encodeURIComponent(location.href)+"&args="+encodeURIComponent(JSON.stringify([].slice.apply(arguments))),e.parentNode.insertBefore(l,e)}})}(window, document, "script", "Rumble"); Rumble("play", {"video":"v70smfa","div":"rumble_v70smfa"}); Source Links: (20) 7SEES (@7SEES_) / X 7SEES | Linktree New Tab (21) The Last American Vagabond on X: "“One of Kash Patel's staff threatened my staff with a criminal investigation if we didn't “straighten up & play ball” … they said “we're going to investigate your staff for fraud”” - if true, Kash is “weaponizing gov” or wiling to let a criminal walk. https://t.co/hGMfzFalsz" / X New Tab (20) 7SEES on X: "MIT finally admitting that they can use nano-scale wireless devices to remotely program areas of the brain. MIT researchers created microscopic wireless electronic devices that travel through blood and implant in target brain regions, where they provide electrical stimulation. https://t.co/qgaN27HVcV" / X New therapeutic brain implants could defy the need for surgery | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology Bob Langer The Coronavirus "Common Denominator" Tied To Charles Lieber & Israel's NY "Smart Cities" The Charles Lieber Connection: From Nanotechnology To COVID-19 To Technocracy Charles Lieber's nanoscale transistors can enter cells without harming them | Harvard Magazine Is Smart Dust Already In Use On The Population & Was "COVID-19" An Attempted Experimental Next Step? MakerCon: Alasdair Allan and "The Inevitability of Smart Dust" - YouTube Biodigital Convergence, COVID Magnetogenetic Ferritin Vaccines & Big Spikes In Mass Vaccinated Areas Genetically engineered 'Magneto' protein remotely controls brain and behaviour | Science | The Guardian Coronavirus Gives a Dangerous Boost to DARPA's Darkest Agenda The Quiet Transition From DARPA's XAI To Elon's xAI & Haaretz Exposes Sadistic Nature Of The IDF Internet of Nano-Things and Wireless Body Area Networks (WBAN) - 1st E Blockchain Based Delay and Energy Harvest Aware Healthcare Monitoring System in WBAN Environment - PubMed Mind-altering ‘brain weapons' no longer only science fiction, say researchers | Chemical weapons | The Guardian British government plans to introduce cameras that detect emotions - Disclose.tv New Tab (20) Saagar Enjeti on X: "This is a direct push to get children addicted to personalized AI slop. Also as disgusting as it sounds it will almost certainly explode a certain type of porn Burn it to the ground" / X Presidential-AI-Challenge-Guidebook-for-Participation.pdf (20) 7SEES on X: "Another push past the goal posts for global digital only currency." / X New Tab (20) 7SEES on X: "6G is BioDigital Convergence. Nano-Scale Piezoelectric Sensors Programmed to Hide on T-Cells, Neuromodulation, mRNA Immunosuppression, Bio Field Hijacking, Metabolic Energy Harvesting. Real Time Integration with Smart-Cities, Data Recorded on Blockchain, Interoperating with" / X (20) The Last American Vagabond on X: "As I said last night. This is the Great Reset. https://t.co/SYYxkC1RmT" / X (20) 7SEES on X: "The irony and sarcasm here will slowly be replaced with a sobering reality as someone utters this phrase with genuine sincerity 10 years from now." / X Pronomos Capital & The Rapid Transition To A Techno-Feudal State The Network State Coup And The Engineered Transition To "Tech Zionism" Trump & The Zionist/Globalist Technocrats Are Building Your New Society Whether You Like It Or Not Seasteading is back — but its history is stained with failure | The Independent How President Trump Can Crush Socialism and Save a Freedom City in Honduras New Tab (20) 7SEES on X: "The Department of Education just got a fresh injection of Palantir Surveillance Software. https://t.co/fT2QfoHP9L I couldn't find anything confirming this, but I think it's probably safe to assume that just like with FARA, Israel probably doesn't qualify as "foreign" here. https://t.co/OMJimomJT6" / X Palantir quietly lands in Education Department through foreign funding portal | FedScoop 12.mp4 (20) 7SEES on X: "Palantirs entire business model is empowering genocidal terrorists who call themselves governments." / X German state parliament approves use of Palantir police software - Disclose.tv Welcome to the Palantir World Order New Tab (20) The Solari Report | Catherine Austin Fitts on X: "Trump and Johnson leading the implementation of the control grid - with a $2 trillion a year deficit, the uniparty does what the central bankers tell them to do https://t.co/22nA4b2IfE" / X (20) Thomas Massie on X: "This week we vote on the National Defense Authorization Act. I offered these amendments to restore freedom, promote peace, cut billions of dollars in foreign aid, and put America First. @SpeakerJohnson and the Rules Committee chose to prevent any amendments from coming to a vote. https://t.co/7rFVBLT1hw" / X (17) Arnaud Bertrand on X: "Insanely, submitting your past 5 years' social media to enter the U.S. as a tourist is only a small part of the proposed upcoming requirements. You'll also need to give your DNA (!) among many other new requirements. All the additional info you'll need to give as a tourist https://t.co/h2cqdgGW9p" / X New Tab (15) 7SEES on X: ""Recently, it (Tesla) has asked a federal judge to prohibit NHTSA from releasing data about crashes related to the use of Full Self Driving and Autopilot systems." https://t.co/ZTkVNggSZo https://t.co/kMacyvqPkg" / X Vault7 - Home The CIA is interested in hacking your car, WikiLeaks claims | Mashable (20) James Li on X: "When I watch this, all I can think about is the fact that Israel has the *alleged* capability to detonate any of these devices remotely at any given time — should we ever "step out of line".
Today's wisdom comes from The Common Denominator of Success by Albert E.N. Gray. If you're loving Heroic Wisdom Daily, be sure to subscribe to the emails at heroic.us/wisdom-daily. And… Imagine unlocking access to the distilled wisdom form 700+ of the greatest books ever written. That's what Heroic Premium offers: Unlimited access to every Philosopher's Note. Daily inspiration and actionable tools to optimize your energy, work, and love. Personalized coaching features to help you stay consistent and focused Upgrade to Heroic Premium → Know someone who'd love this? Share Heroic Wisdom Daily with them, and let's grow together in 2025! Share Heroic Wisdom Daily →
Daf Yomi Zevachim 76Episode 2156Babble on Talmud with Sruli RappsJoin the chat: https://chat.whatsapp.com/LMbsU3a5f4Y3b61DxFRsqfMERCH: https://www.etsy.com/shop/BabbleOnTalmudSefaria: https://www.sefaria.org.il/Zevachim.76a?lang=heEmail: sruli@babbleontalmud.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/babble_on_talmudFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/p/Babble-on-Talmud-100080258961218/#dafyomi #talmud00:00 Intro03:15 Mayvee kodashim l'veis hapsul58:51 Conclusion
What does it really take to leave Wall Street, take massive risks, and help shape the future of innovation?For Jeff Ransdell, Founding Partner and Managing Director of Fuel Venture Capital and CEO of Maquia Capital, the journey started with $138 billion under management at Merrill Lynch, and a decision to walk away. Since then, he's invested over $150 million into South Florida startups, helping build Miami into a global tech hub while navigating the most unpredictable era in venture capital.In this episode of Common Denominator, we unpack Jeff's transition from Wall Street to venture, his take on the AI revolution, and what it means to invest in founders who can lead through chaos and change.In this episode, you'll learn:- How Jeff left corporate stability to build one of Miami's top venture firms- Why the “AI meta-shift” will redefine work, wealth, and the human condition- How Fuel Venture Capital turned South Florida into a startup destination- The founder traits investors look for before writing a check- Why emotional intelligence matters as much as financial acumen- What the next five years will look like for startups, investors, and innovationLike this episode? Leave a review here: https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominatorTimestamps:00:00 – Introduction: Risk, Mindset & Why Venture Capital Matters05:00 – How Jeff Assesses Risk & Why VC Isn't What You Think10:00 – Coachability, Pivoting & The Founder Traits Fuel VC Looks For15:00 – Jeff's Leap From Wall Street to Venture Capital20:00 – The AI Meta-Shift: What's Coming in the Next 5 Years25:00 – Jobs, Humanity & The Future Economic Reality30:00 – Why Tech Might Push Us Back to Simpler Living35:00 – Jeff's Favorite Investments & Lessons From Miami's Startup SceneFollow Jeff: http://linkin.bio/jeffransdellvc Fuel Venture Capital: https://fuelventurecapital.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jeffransdellvc/
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What does it really take to challenge the status quo, fight for truth, and defend your values in a system built to silence dissent?For Aaron Siri, attorney and advocate, it began in courtrooms and regulatory filings, standing up for parental rights, informed consent, and transparent systems, even when the odds were stacked against him. Today, he navigates litigation, policy, and public trust in one of the most contentious debates of our time: vaccines.In this episode of Common Denominator, we unpack Aaron's journey from legal underdog to vocal defender of transparency, how he analyzes systems most ignore, and why courage isn't loud, it's consistent.In this episode, you'll learn:- What it looks like when regulatory systems prioritize power over process- Why informed consent and transparency matter more today than ever- The mindset shifts required to challenge conventional wisdom and speak truth to power- How to stay true to your values when pressure to conform is constant- What freedom of speech really means when you're up against the establishmentLike this episode? Leave a review here: https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominatorLearn more about Aaron Siri: Siri & Glimstad Law Firm: https://www.sirillp.com/aaron-siri/Book: "Vaccines, Amen: The Religion of Vaccines" https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B0FQ4JMV3M
When life knocks you down, do you get up and fight — or give in?Florida's Lieutenant Governor, Jay Collins is a former Green Beret, amputee, and decorated veteran whose life story defines grit, service, and purpose.From growing up on a small family farm to surviving life-altering injuries in Afghanistan, Jay shares how faith, family, and resilience shaped his journey from soldier to statesman, serving as second-in-command of one of America's most influential states. He opens up about losing his leg, rebuilding his life, and proving that anything valuable in life isn't given — it's earned. Could a future run for Governor be on the horizon?What you'll learn in this episode of Common Denominator: - The mindset that carried Jay through combat and loss- Lessons in resilience, leadership, and faith- The meaning of service and sacrifice- How to raise the next generation with purpose and accountability- The importance of community, family, and freedomLike this episode? Leave a review here: https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominatorLearn more about Lt. Gov. Jay Collins: https://www.flgov.com/eog/leadership/people/jay-collinshttps://www.senatorjaycollins.com/@jaycollinsfl https://www.instagram.com/jaycollinsfl
Mrs. Trask has had two sudden premonitions of an impending murder, each resulting in a killing. A third predicted murder fails to come off.Original air date: January 28, 1952
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What does it take to protect a city, lead thousands, and stay grounded in purpose?For Sheriff Rosie Cordero-Stutz, the first elected sheriff in Miami-Dade County in over 60 years, it started with a childhood calling and a single mom who worked three jobs to keep the dream alive. From patrolling high-crime streets in the 90s to leading 4,800 officers through today's complex emergencies, Sheriff Rosie shares how faith, family, and fierce dedication guide her every decision.In this episode of Common Denominator, we dive into Rosie's remarkable rise to becoming one of the most powerful public safety officials in Florida.What you'll learn:
What separates the best from the rest? How do elite athletes, top entrepreneurs, and high performers think differently about work, failure, and health?Dr. Andy Galpin, PhD in Muscle Physiology, uncovers the science of human performance and longevity. From his humble beginnings in rural America to coaching world-class athletes and exploring the future of AI in health, Andy shares his insights on resilience, focus, and optimizing the body and mind.On this episode of Common Denominator, we explore: -The “performance anchors” that determine your results at any age-How elite performers balance skill, toughness, and focus-The truth about chronic disease, lifestyle, and sleep in modern society-What AI is really doing for health and where the future is headed-Lessons from failure, competition, and the value of hard workTIMESTAMPS: 00:00 Introduction: The Journey to Elite Performance08:45 Understanding Resilience and Sacrifice16:13 Health Focus for the 40-Something Male19:49 The State of Health in Society25:49 The Role of AI in Health32:36 Gratitude and Reflection on Success➡️ Like this episode? Leave a review here: RateThisPodcast.com/commondenominator
What does it really take to turn grief into purpose, and build a life anchored in giving, creativity, and real human connection For Sarah Akiba, celebrity stylist and founder of the nonprofit “Angel Watching Over Me,” it started with loss. After her father passed away, she built community through support groups, opened safe spaces for girls in public schools, and launched multiple ventures—all rooted in service and soul In this episode of Common Denominator, we unpack how grief became Sarah's superpower, how she balances creativity with entrepreneurship, and why alignment, not aesthetics, is what truly connects people. In this episode, you'll learn:
What does it really take to build a business from nothing and design a life you love?For Emily Frisella, founder of The Paper & Plan Co., it started on a farm. She bought her first house at 19, launched a brick-and-mortar business at 20, and turned early failure into fuel for long-term success. Today, she leads multiple brands with relentless execution, discipline, and heart.In this episode of Common Denominator, we unpack how resilience, reverse-engineered goals, and paper planning helped Emily go from a $42 bank balance to a thriving entrepreneurial life she loves.In this episode, you'll learn:
➡️ Like this episode? Leave a review here: RateThisPodcast.com/commondenominatorWhat happens after you sell your company for $500 million?For Yosef Martin, founder of BoxyCharm, the exit was just the beginning. After scaling one of the fastest-growing beauty subscription brands in the world, he found himself facing a different challenge—reinventing his identity, finding purpose, and building a life beyond business.I sat down with Yosef to unpack the mindset, momentum, and discipline behind his $500M journey—and what it really takes to grow something big, walk away, and start again with even more clarity.In this episode of Common Denominator, I unpack:- How BoxyCharm scaled to 1M+ subscribers and beat legacy giants- The mindset shifts Yosef made going from founder to post-exit- The tactical playbook behind his $500M growth strategy- Why he's now betting on peptides, biohacking, and human optimizationTimestamps:00:00 Introduction 02:00 The Journey Begins: From Israel to Entrepreneurship03:01 Building BoxyCharm: The Subscription Box Revolution06:04 Navigating Challenges: The Rollercoaster of Business Growth09:09 The Exit: Selling BoxyCharm and Life After11:59 The Next Chapter: Biohacking and New Ventures14:59 Investing in Startups: What to Look For17:48 Gratitude and Reflection: Lessons LearnedFollow Yosef: https://www.instagram.com/yflmartin/?hl=enCommon Denominator PodcastWebsite: https://moshepopack.com/podcast/YouTube: http://youtube.com/mpopackInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/mpopackFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/MoshePopackNewsletter: https://moshepopack.com/newsletter/
What does it take to rebuild your life when you've lost everything?At just 21, Shawn Balva went from top football prospect to facing 40 years in prison. But prison didn't break him, it built him. In solitary confinement, he found faith. In structure, he found purpose. And through it all, he transformed from inmate to mentor.I sat down with Shawn to unpack how pain, discipline, and spiritual conviction reshaped his identity, and how he's now helping others find redemption in their own story.In this episode of Common Denominator, I unpack:
What if your stress, posture, and productivity all came down to how you sit, breathe, and move, moment to moment?Turns out, peak performance isn't built in the gym. It's built in your living room, your office chair, your breath.I sat down with Aaron Alexander, creator of The Align Method and movement coach to elite performers like Aaron Rodgers, Usher, and Lance Armstrong. Aaron shares how posture, breathwork, and environment design are the overlooked keys to reducing stress, improving focus, and leading with clarity — without burnout.In this episode of Common Denominator, I unpack:- How Aaron can use posture and body language to shift hormones, confidence, and clarity- The breathwork routine Aaron teaches high performers to calm anxiety fast- Simple mobility habits that can fit into your day without hitting the gym- Environment tweaks that make any home or office a performance toolLike this episode? Leave a review here: https://ratethispodcast.com/commondenominatorGuest Links:Follow Aaron: https://www.instagram.com/aaronalexander/The Align Podcast: https://www.alignpodcast.com/Timestamps:
Gay Hendricks is a psychologist, teacher, and an author renowned for his work on relationship transformation. Conscious loving is about more than just romance, it's about clarity, commitment, and growth. With endless advice on the internet on how to optimize your love life, what if the real answer is aligning your expectations and evolving together? Expect to learn what conscious loving is and the difference from unconscious loving, why its important to feel your feeling and tell the truth in a relationship, what good commitment looks like, how to be more proactively benevolent in their relationship and stop “keeping score” in a culture that constantly teaches people to expect the even 50/50 split every level, what co-commitment is and the steps to building a co-commitment relationship, and much more… Sponsors: See me on tour in America: https://chriswilliamson.live See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get $100 off the best bloodwork analysis in America at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Get 35% off your first subscription on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom Get the brand new Whoop 5.0 and your first month for free at https://join.whoop.com/modernwisdom Timestamps: (0:00) The Key to Conscious Loving (12:54) 10 Seconds of Sweaty Conversation (16:02) Why You Should Be Truthful in a Relationship (21:54) What are the Main Practical Obstacles in a Relationship? (26:43) Creating a Safe Environment to Receive Truth (37:41) Navigating Your Sense of Self in Conscious Relationships (46:40) What is Co-Commitment? (58:47) Breaking the Victimhood Pattern (01:06:25) Men and Women Bring Different Things to the Table (01:15:45) You are the Common Denominator in Your Life (01:27:02) Find Out More About Gay Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices