Aquanaut, ocean conservationist, and documentary filmmaker
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361Firm Briefing "Moody's, Markets and 'Triple B' Act" (May 27 2025)Transcript: https://361.pub/TranscriptBriefingMay27Video: https://361.pub/vidMay27The 361Firm Meetup and Briefing on May 27, 2025, covered various updates and introductions. Mark Sanor and others discussed the attendance of new members, including Nelson Stacks from Waltham, Massachusetts, and Fabian Cousteau, a third-generation ocean explorer. The meeting highlighted the upcoming events in San Francisco and Seattle, including visits to Microsoft in Redmond, Valve Gaming in Bellevue, and the Mayor joining us in Seattle. After Stepher Burke's presentation on markets in light of the US Budget negotiations, Moody's ratings change, Olga Loy shared her insights on changes to expect from the "Big Beautiful Bill" including the impact on private equity, venture capital, extension of opportunity zones. The conversation also touched on the challenges and opportunities in the global economy, particularly in the context of AI and energy innovation. The meeting discussed energy policies, highlighting the shift towards oil and gas over renewables despite high production levels. Jeff Zawadsky noted the delay in SMR applications. Anthony Gordon mentioned VISTA Energy's 262% growth last year and future helium mining on the moon. Andrew Fisch emphasized the negligible impact of new U.S. drilling at $60/barrel oil. Sameer Sirdeshpande discussed sustainable hydrocarbon use. The discussion also covered the potential for China to take over Taiwan by 2027 and the impact of the Ukraine war on global politics. Joe Azzaro stressed the importance of fiscal discipline and productivity improvements to address global debt issues. SUMMARY KEYWORDSNMR company, multi-coast, Bitcoin, digital markets, Tate County, TIFF, secondary fund, venture capital, AI, tax plan, opportunity zones, clean energy tax credits, nuclear deduction, energy policy, renewable energy, nuclear power, hydrocarbons, tax incentives, drilling dynamics, natural gas, AI healthcare, longevity, helium mining, global debt, productivity growth, interest rates, inflation, geopolitical tensionsSPEAKERSContributors included Jeff Zawadsky, Sahir Ali (Modi Ventures), Greg Wilder, Kate Lawrence (Bloccelerate), Candice Beaumont, Andrew Fisch, Marc Rosenberg, Anna Cardona, Sameer Sirdeshpande, Marius Kreft, Anthony Gordon, Fabien Cousteau, Maher Nasri, Lara Druyan (SV Data Capital, Palo Alto), Carl Pro, Mark Sanor, Nelson Stacks, Ben Narasin, Joe Azzaro, Olga Loy, Günter Schmittberger, Roger Arjoon, and many others. You can subscribe to various 361 events and content at https://361firm.com/subs. For reference: Web: www.361firm.com/homeOnboard as Investor: https://361.pub/shortdiagOnboard Deals 361: www.361firm.com/onbOnboard as Banker: www.361firm.com/bankersEvents: www.361firm.com/eventsContent: www.youtube.com/361firmWeekly Digests: www.361firm.com/digest
Welcome to the inaugural episode of The Blue Economy, hosted by Katherine O'Fallon!
The Light Gate welcomes guest: Chris Styles, Canadian UFO researcher/author Date: April 7, 2025. Time: 5-7pm pacific / 8-10pm eastern Episode: 102 Discussion: Shag Harbor Incident, Shelburne USO Encounter Tonight, The Light Gate welcomes UFO researcher/author, Chris Styles. Chris is an active UFO researcher who investigates classic and select current UFO incidents that have occurred in Atlantic Canada. He holds to a “blended” view of the UFO phenomena, that allows room for both the ETH & a significant psychological component. He is best known for his work on the 1967 Shag Harbour Incident and has presented at several MUFON symposia in both Canada and the US. Chris served as a paid technical advisor with several Canadian UFO feature documentaries such as Ocean Entertainment's “The Shag Harbour Incident” and “Northern Lights”. He has appeared in several US, UFO specials, such as “Canada's Roswell” and “UFOs II, Have We Been Visited?” In 2019 Styles appeared in an episode of “Ocean Mysteries” with Celine & Fabien Cousteau. He has been on pretty much all the major UFO podcasts such as Coast-to-Coast and more. Chris is the co-author of two UFO books on the Shag Harbour Incident, “Dark Object” (Dell Bantam) with Don Ledger & “Impact to Contact” (Arcadia House) with Graham Simms. His most recent book is “Sweep Clear 5: NATO's UFO Encounter”, which is available from Amazon Press. In 2023 MUFON Canada presented Chris with an honorary membership in recognition of his lifetime achievement in Ufology. LINKS: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm3799481/ https://shagharbourufoexpo.com/project/chris-styles/
This episode focuses on the life and career of Fabien Cousteau, grandson of the famous Jacques-Yves Cousteau. They detail his early exposure to ocean exploration, his work with sharks, and his various underwater projects and documentaries. A major focus is his "Mission 31" project, where he spent 31 days underwater. The sources also mention his Fabien Cousteau Ocean Learning Center and his plans for future underwater habitats like Proteus. These resources highlight Cousteau's dedication to ocean conservation and education, carrying on his family's legacy of underwater exploration.#FabienCousteau #JacquesYvesCousteau #OceanExploration #SharkResearch #Mission31 #UnderwaterProjects #Documentaries #OceanConservation #FabienCousteauOceanLearningCenter #Proteus #UnderwaterHabitats #MarineEducation #CousteauLegacy
Dual Use, Space and Ocean Tech...NY Tech Summit (Feb. 25, 2025)SUMMARY KEYWORDSDual use technology, space tech, ocean tech, cyber security, AI disinformation, Elon Musk, Ukrainian defense, naval drones, autonomous weapons, national security, public-private partnerships, ocean habitats, acoustic technology, geopolitical tensions, investment opportunities.SPEAKERSElena Anfimova, Gator Greenwill, Tony Cruz, Lisa Marrocchino, Speaker 5, Jaha Cummings, Carl Pro, Robin Blackstone, Speaker 4, Andrew Fisch, Mark Sanor, Dan BrahmyMark Sanor 00:00So Gator is with a family office investing in this space for a long time, with natural resources and minerals heritage. And Dan I met with Josette Sheeran at her office, otherwise known as the Carlisle hotel, who said, "You got to meet Dan", and now here you are on one of our panels. Thank you. So I think it's better, if you might share the "Harry Met Sally" story of how you met Dan Gator Greenwill 00:49That's a pretty good story. So Dan literally sent me a cold LinkedIn request. Yeah, there was a cut. Yeah, there were a couple of them. Mark Sanor Wait, let's go back further. How did you identify him for that LinkedIn request? Or is it random? Or is it random? Give them the micDan Brahmy 01:15again, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. So as part of being a founder who has lived in Israel for the last 19 years, I've learned to be a relentless a**hole. And so it's kind of this skill set that you need to have in order to get to a certain point in life. And I saw I heard about Gator, and then I was like, you know, maybe I'll just try and find his email address, and then I've had a lot of success is just reaching out to people on LinkedIn, you'd be surprised, like former head of Senate Intel Committee, folks like guys that you would never dream of even talking to. And I was like, hello, I'm Dan, can we talk? And they're like, Okay, whatever. So it just worked out in that Mark Sanor 01:57In that same spirit, how did you How did you land Elon Musk as a client. Dan Brahmy 02:04Well, that's a long story. So, so I'll let you go into the things you wanted to Mark Sanor 02:10say. Oh, he doesn't want that question. Gator Greenwill 02:15So anyhow, Dan, Dan did a cold LinkedIn email. It was persistent, but the area that he was exploring was of already significant interest to the investment fund that I was working for. We had long had the thesis that one of the fundamental risks of AI before we even make it to anything like artificial general or artificial super intelligence was the risk of an explosion in disinformation, an explosion in cognitive biases being worsened by tribalism on the internet. And so Dan had obviously been building the company for a couple of years when he reached out to us, he was beginning to do a raise for series, a had, you know, a very reputable Israeli VC fund that was looking for an American co investor, and we negotiated term sheet, and the the rest is history. Now we are sitting here before you today. So that's the the one minute version. There's obviously more twists and turns along along the way, we've ended up supplying probably 20 to 30, like 20% of your capital stack, maybe something like, something like that. So ended up being a significant portion of, you know, raise capital for for si Amber, before the the pre IPO and the IPO. So Mark Sanor 03:39now just want I'm getting, I want to ask more unfair questions, but, but as you look at the landscape, right? That's this is a one, just one example. What do you what excites and scares you in this? Well, Gator Greenwill 03:52a lot of things scare me. A lot of things also excite me. So the rising geo political tensions between the US and the EU certainly scare me, as well as you know, the US and at least a few members of the of the five eyes, given how important that's been to the defense posture of the United States historically, by the same token, it is causing a much needed re evaluation in Europe of spend by the government sector in the defense space, there has already been a number of very promising start ups actually being founded, even in Ukraine, but also in Estonia, Germany, France, that have been started for funding due To the government just under investing in the sector. So I'm excited about the prospects for investing in Euro zone companies. Aside from Israel, we've also invested in several Euro zone companies. So one thing that distinguished us from early on was we looked at dual use as being not just about American innovation, but American and partners innovation, including. Between Israel and the Euro zone especially. Mark Sanor 05:04And so, I guess from your perspective, Dan, maybe tell a little bit of your some interesting stories. I do want to hear this Elon Musk story, if you don't mind. Dan Brahmy 05:18So just to give a quick background, I'm Dan. I'm one of the co founders and the CEO of a company called Sara, which is cyber security in abracadabra, which kind of reveals what we do. But the truth is, we've been out there for seven years. Raised money from from gators Firm A couple times, and the value has been actually much more than just the capital. Usually, we've raised money from Founders Fund a couple times, which is Peter thiel's fund as well in the valley. So the guy who created PayPal and Palantir and all these other names out there, and for four years, we've actually done the typical mistake of the tech very geeky founders, which is building, building, building, building, and not getting enough feedback from the market. And so for a very long time, we were at that stage where we were trying to prove to the world by building the best possible tech. And I think we had, we still have, actually, it gave us a crazy advantage, but not within that four years time period, because we were just building that technology, which is in a nutshell, able to distinguish between real bad and fake for the online realm, social media and traditional media outlets, right? We want to be that, that sort of stamp of trustworthiness for the conversations that we all witness on a daily basis, on a minute basis, maybe at this point. And then, because of the Peter Thiel relationship, and because we were a tiny Israeli start up with no presence whatsoever, you know, two years ago, two and a half years ago, and we landed an article in the Wall Street Journal and forms, because we made so much noise about the stuff that we were solving. Some day, we received a call from a lawyer who was like, the pit bull is pit bull I've ever seen in my life. Scaries guy I've ever talked to sends me an email like, we need to talk now my client. I'm like, who's your client? It's like, sign this 19,000 pages. NDA, that if you say anything, you'll die tomorrow. I'm like, All right, well, we'll try, you know, we'll just sign it and and then he it's true. I mean, he told me about this story, and so he's like, this is Elon. I'm like, oh, okay, that's interesting. What does he want? It's like, well, you know what he wants? He wants to buy Twitter, right? He wants to take the price lower, and he feels like there's a gap between what Twitter is claiming about the bots and the sock puppets and trolls and the fake accounts and their impact. And so what's what they are stating about themselves as a company, what is truly happening? They're claiming that it's less than 5% has no impact over the conversations that we see over Twitter X, and he feels like it's more and he wants to use your tech. So I'm thinking this might be the first little star on our shoulder as a tech company, right? You want to start building credibility. It's kind of a deep, deep tech, a dual use technology, serving, you know, defense organizations and national security. So I said, interesting. So I mean, obviously I would do it for for a penny, right? But we didn't ask for a penny. We asked for much more, and he paid. And at the very end, I think we did a very good job. And, you know, same pit bull at the end was, I was like, Hey, can I be honest? You know, it would be great if you'd allow us to, you know, we're small company, maybe, maybe, maybe you'd allow me to go to the press, because we did such a great job. And, you know, I think his thought process was, what would a 15 people team from Israel could probably do in the press. What are the odds of these folks making noise? Wrong assumption. We very wrong assumption. So within two weeks, I received another call, after we published 1000 articles in the press, it's just like CNN, all that stuff. And he was, like, a so my client is not happy, because now he's the owner of Twitter. I'm like, okay, and well, now it reflects really badly on him, because now he's the owner of Twitter, and you're bashing the head of Twitter itself. He's the owner my Yeah, but I mean, I, you know, I saved him a billion dollars. So should be happy like, Yeah, I think you should stop now with the press. You know, it's enough and say, Well, you know, we also lined up like the BBC and stuff like that. But it will stop at 1000 articles from that moment onward. So it was November 2022 as a small company, literally, with almost no revenue at that. Point, I think we were like 300,000 in annual revenue. In two years, we ramped up to 6,000,006 point 1 million. So we blew up, and today we serve I'm not saying it's all about the musk story, but I think that a lot of startups are just completely, completely disregarding that credibility and that and that brand recognition, because, though, because we not that we we're all about the tech and the tech and the tech and and eventually, and I'm saying this as a as a tech company in the field of AI combating bad AI with good AI. And I'm going to be shooting myself in the foot as a soon to be CEO of a publicly traded company. Don't hate me when I say that. But I think people don't buy technologies. I think people by people, and people by trust, and we, I guess we prove that with time, and this equation proves to be the worthy one. That's the route we're going to be taking. And two thirds of the companies, like R and D people, I don't understand half of the shit that they're saying to me, and I'm like, Oh, very interesting. And we just move on to other stuff. But the truth is this, what we see, it's, it's, it's incredible technology being leveraged by people who want to trust you, like, that's pretty much that. So that's the story about which Mark Sanor 11:13has, which has lots of use cases, right? Not just dual use, not just forensics, but we, Dan Brahmy 11:20serve. I mean, we're on a, this is a do use technology panel. Is this a panel? If it's two people, yeah, Mark Sanor 11:28it says it's a duo, duo, dual use, the finalist Dan Brahmy 11:33of the panelists. Yeah, we work a lot with national security folks. Mark Sanor 11:38So why do you want to go public? Why? Because he wants you to go public. Do you Gator Greenwill 11:46sure I'll so I think what we found, and I've been discussing the IPO option with Dan, actually from fairly soon after he invested, after I invested, sorry, when he began discussing with different bankers about that option, and our conclusion, based on conversations with a number of VCs, was that even with a relatively depressed IPO market, the cost of money for a compelling company in the public markets is significantly cheaper than what you were seeing from VCs, post SVB bank collapse, term sheets got especially outside, if you were not a kind of golden circle Silicon Valley, you kind of Blessed from above. You know, start up. You know, no offense against, you know, friends of mine that run companies like that. You know, the types of term sheets that you get, you know, from VCs, you know, are typically fairly onerous. And so that was where, you know, we said, hey, you know, this is going to give a, you know, a multi year pipeline to the company, you know, add a, add a valuation that is has lots of room to grow, but is not overly dilutive to the existence. And I know Mark Sanor 12:59we're not pitching, but I think there's an opportunity for us to get it before the IPO. Right? All right, we'll come back to that, all right, other than his space, 13:12not a technical Mark Sanor 13:14one, a personal one, what kind of answer? Dan Brahmy 13:16I was born in France, so I'm romantic by default. Okay, I've lived there. I've no, it's true. I Yeah, so this is the beginning of the story. So 50, I live 15 years in France, right? And everything's about, like cheese love and Eiffel Tower and whatever people like about France. But there's something true about it. And I mean, I could be talking about the VC and the term sheets and the limitation preference and all the stuff that everybody knows about that probably more than I do, as a matter of fact. But the truth is, I think that we're solving one of the most complex and interesting challenges that we're facing at least nowadays, maybe in seven years will be different. But for sure, for the last two, three years and for the next couple of years ahead of us, we are in really deep, muddy waters, and the way that I want one of our, one of our board members is Mike Pompeo, the former secretary of state and head of CIA Jos about to be coming in as a post listing board member. You already know that one of the one of my ways to pitch it to them was not telling them about the technicalities of becoming a NASDAQ publicly traded company, because they know everything about complexities. While I was running in diapers, the guy run the CIA, so obviously he knows more than everything that I would do in life. But I told him, I think people need to perceive that opportunity at being a shareholder at Sara some point in time, in the next couple of years, as maybe I should invest in Batman, like if we are Batman. Mark Sanor 15:01It, and you guys are running this, the French, the French coming out, and you the romantic Dan Brahmy 15:08stuff, very geeky. But the truth is, like, if we're Batman and Batman has technologies, all I'm saying is, I think people should see this as the opportunity to potentially invest and help us build the technology that can be the arsenal to bring back a little bit of more transparency for this democracy. Because right now, Gotham City is running on fumes and is looking really bad, and the and and it feels like people are losing trust, slowly losing trust. And I got, I got two children, the two boys, four and two years old. And I'm saying, Damn, by the time they became they become teenagers. What are they going to be trusting? What they'll never trust the media. They'll never trust social media. They'll never trust things that they see online. Because Mark Sanor 15:49every single No, their dad is Batman, Dan Brahmy 15:53right? So that's Batman, exactly. I don't know who's Batman son in the show, but, but that's, that's the way I that I sold it to Mike Pompeo, like I want people to invest in Batman's also Mark Sanor 16:04so questions for Batman, yes, Tony Cruz 16:13as Iron Gate Capital Advisors looked at you. Have you talked 16:15to Hamlet you save? Or Gator Greenwill 16:20I know Hamlet, I'm not sure if he's under in this specific deal. I mean, some of the, you know, some of the companies that, some of the funds that, Iron Gate is an investor, and I'm almost, like 99.9% they have evaluated. Now, obviously it's a different, you know, it's about to be a different deal than it was, you know, before an IPO. So always could be worth revising that discussion with Ty and Hannah, Mark Sanor 16:48I've got two more panelists for you. So their space is up there as well. And there's ocean space and ocean we're talking about explain, and then ELA as a fund that focuses on dual use technologies as well. So just introduce yourself. Let me start with Elena. Elena Anfimova 17:14Thank you, Mark. Hello everybody. My name is Elena, and I do Ukrainian defense technology. You probably know that Ukrainian defense Tech is a world class innovation, and the gap the capital requirement for it is massive, and the challenge, in addition to capital, is how this startups access global markets. So this is what my team is working on, how to integrate the start ups in the domestic defense ecosystem, Mark Sanor 17:52which some are calling like the new Israel of sorts. And we were just having, oh, Patrick's here. We were having lunch, and I said, Do you know who Jacques Cousteau is? And he goes, Well, yes, I've been and I invested in his films. So his grandson, Fabian, has been with us, the CEO of his company. We've invested a lot in space, but we can gain a lot more cheaply and investing in ocean based research. So maybe it's explain. Hello. Lisa Marrocchino 18:27I'm Lisa March, you know, thank you for having me join. I was just in Davos, in Ukraine, cyber tech, and technology was a big topic there, so that was super interesting for me to be there was an AI cyber conference that I attended, but what we're doing at Fabien Cousteau was the first grandson of Jacques co he. His grandfather was an ocean pioneer. I'm missing the word ocean tech from this conference. However, we need to change that. I also do believe that ocean tech is going dual use because of, well, lots of geo political reasons. So we are focusing on national security as well, and I'll explain a little bit of that. But Jacques Cousteau developed some of the first technologies to spend more time in the ocean and habitat. So he built some of what are called Ocean habitats, or really ocean research stations. And we have one in space, but we don't have any in the ocean, because the space race took off and got and left ocean behind. And as Mark mentioned, in the last 10 years, you have invested $270 billion in space and private creating a private space industry, and created, really 1700 new companies. So we really are poised to create that same kind of phenomenon in ocean tech. It reminds me I was at Goldman Sachs in technology research, and this really reminds me of, kind of the early days of technology. So his grandson kind of picked up the torch, and in 2014 lived under water for. For 31 days with five scientists did not come up to the surface because of what's called saturation technology. So he was fully saturated and lived at 20 meters or 60 feet, and did not come up to the surface for 31 days. So what happened were some phenomenal things under water. There were science experiments and kind of an acceleration of that, because you were able to dive 10 to 12 hours a day. So what we can't get back is time. We know we're at the precipice. I mean, someone mentioned a meteor here that almost hit us. I think we should be much more worried about climate change and some cataclysmic issues that are we're on the precipice of then, uh, then the media are hitting us. So I, I do believe that we we're not focused on climate change and maybe this administration and where we are today. We won't be so we will use acoustic technology, sensor technologies we've evolved from just, not just a habitat, but really thinking about an ocean technology platform where acoustics and all of those national security issues do come into play, so I'll stop there. Mark Sanor 21:08Excellent. All right, so you got a cornucopia now, space slash ocean tech we'll use and let's open up for questions. I Andrew Fisch 21:24Yes, Lisa, this is completely anecdotal, so you'll have to answer the question, and in for me, a lot of call them drums. You know, a lot of devices are being now, roaming the oceans, gathering data of all types. Is this advancing what you do as opposed to having literally people in one place? Is it complimentary? Is replace anything? Lisa Marrocchino 21:53That's a great question. We really believe that you can't just do it alone with robots, but robots are essential to amplifying and extending the reach of humans. So and this, and NASA is really studying this a lot as well, kind of this human robotic interface, if human interface, and we really, if it were true that robots could do it all, they would be the only thing on them, you know, in space. So I do believe that you really need that human interaction with robots, and we can really amplify so yes, we'll be looking at robotics, a U V S, R V s, all of those in surrounding the habitat. If you think about the habitat, is almost like the smartest node on this kind of technology ecosystem platform. So that's how we're really looking at it. There's some super cool technology that can be, that's not even out there yet, right? That can Yes, absolutely. Then they have to come back, right? And then you have to interpret the data and AI, you know, one i We heard a lot about AI, and that's one thing I'm really optimistic about. AI in ocean, there is a flood gate of so if you send out all those robots and all those sensors, are going to come back with a flood gate, even with hydro acoustic modems, there's so much information to be processed, and we know nothing about our ocean. You know, 5% has been explored. So how can we gather all that data to do to make better decisions? And that's where robotics and AI, I think, is going to make play a major role in so we're looking at all of that technology. 23:24Thank you. Other questions, Robin Blackstone 23:28yes, you know, it occurred to me that one of the factors in the ocean as well as space, is that a lot of it's not own by anybody, and so it's essentially available to be used by anyone. And it's kind of an interesting advantage. Planets would be another space like that. So in a world that's carved up already on land, there's these vast spaces which are not carved up. I was just wondering what advantage that might confer on the work that you guys are doing. Lisa Marrocchino 24:06Yeah, that's also a really good question. So we work with governments and create public private partnerships. So right now we're working in Curacao, Portugal, cap of ver very talking to people in the Middle East as well. And it is interesting. And I don't know if anyone saw there was recently an article about China having a habitat. So there is an interesting phenomenon happening, going back to dual use and national security. All of a sudden, China is interested in creating habitats at very deep levels and to do all kinds of things. So it is an open space, and I think legal will probably play a big role in this. But right now, we haven't had any issues with putting a habitat in waters outside of Curacao, Cabo Verde, Portugal and the Red Sea even there's no been no issues with like, you can't go there or you can go here, but it is a. Question, the ocean is even bigger than lots of spaces, and it's right in our back yard. So as long as we all play nice, I think, for a while, and if China accelerates what they're doing in the ocean, I hope and pray that that will help the US come to terms with investing more and the ocean, 25:27just Jaha Cummings 25:32on the question of, I guess, areas for American city research, if you consider micro Nisa, I lived there for 20 years, and the whole northern Pacific we have our contact agreement, which pretty much denies rite of passage to anyone else, right? Lisa Marrocchino 25:45I love that. Yeah, all areas are open, or we're open to any area really that would that where we need to study the ocean, and really that's almost everywhere, because we haven't studied it at Gator Greenwill 26:00all. On the question of geo politics and the ocean, one I think still under sung aspect is that right now, an enormous amount of the world internet traffic travels underneath the sea, and we've already started to see Russian and Chinese vessels in the Baltic and the South China Seas, you know, imping upon Japan, or in some cases, it seems, even sabotage cables running into various countries that they have issues with, so that, you know, that's a live area, and sort of, you know, the oceans have Been a commons for the transmission of data and information for a long time that now seems to be more and more contested in the current moment of power competition, Mark Sanor 26:53one second, and you could just say, What? What? What's the technology or company in Ukraine or related to Ukraine, because you're not all investing in Ukrainian companies that you think is most exciting we should be aware of. Well, 27:10naval drones. Elena Anfimova 27:21Oh, yeah, they're Ukraine is the first country in the world to sort of create effective naval drones. And on December 31 actually, Ukrainian naval drones. Magura down two Russian helicopters, the first presidents in the world. Hard to say it's a record. It's still loss of life, and it's still horrible, but technologically speaking, a very cheap drone, comparatively to any missile destroys a helicopter to helicopter, and the third was damaged, but made it be back to the base. Another case, one Ukrainian drones destroyed $130 million missile system. So the mind boggling phenomenon about these drones and the drone warfare is that this very cheap, again, comparatively speaking, devices destroy multi, sometimes 100 million dollar systems I just came back from the Emirates, I went to this I deck, if you guys know, it's like the largest defense exhibition. And there were all these massive, shiny toys. And I was walking, walking by and thinking, you know, like a 10,000 drone can destroy it. So I guess what we're still grasping is how war far has changed, and dominating military stockpiles are still kind of the World War Two, slash Cold War technology, and what needs to happen right now is restocking in pivoting to defense technology right now in Ukraine, the war that's happening is a war of drones. It's not even people anymore. I had a like innovative aim in system for guns, you know, for actual soldiers to do something with. And I had to drop it because there were no soldiers anymore fighting, you know, each other. It's drones and swarms of drones. So. Boom, and there is a Ukrainian company called swam. I did not invest in it, but that that's a really break through technology. Then another, and pretty much like the group of tech that's really promising, is autonomous weapons. So it's autonomous remote control weapons that you can control from 1000s of miles, and they help to save lives and pretty much like it's equipment destroying equipment. Given how horrendous the concept of physical warfare is in 21st century, it's still better than you know this mince meat attacks, I think it's called that Russia really prefers and practices to this day in Ukraine, we do not have the human resources to sort of mimic this strategy. And we value human life, so we really prefer robots to fight. So it's autonomous weapons, autonomous drones, and also electronic warfare, because what's happening is that when you face a technologically advanced enemy is that there is this jam in spoofing and GPS de night environments, so the navigation systems become very prominent anti drone electronic warfare. So how do you protect your drone from being jammed and spoofed so that it completes its mission. The interesting part is that American drones did not do well in Ukraine at all. They were expensive and glitchy because they could not perform with that kind of electronic warfare that Russia has, and let's say, out of 10, Mission only two mission are complete, whereas Ukrainian drones can complete eight out of 10. There is one. Mark Sanor 32:14Compare that to the US technology today. How far are we? Because we haven't done this every day, every hour, like you Elena Anfimova 32:21are well. So this is what I'm saying, and a lot of feedback is kind of just like a second hand information, right? Because it's not published anywhere. The only sort of public media account of this that I found is a Wall Street Journal article about that, how glitchy and how ineffective American drones were tested in Ukraine on the battlefield. Because you see, the thing is, is even for AI to function well, it needs to be fed lots of data. Ukraine is pretty much the only place where you can get the data, and that pretty much accounts for why Ukrainian drones are so much more efficient than any other drones unless they are tested on the battle field in Ukraine. So for any drone company right now to be you know, anything, they have to be there, there. So is 33:21this something you're looking Gator Greenwill 33:22at? Absolutely. We're active investors in the conference system space, happy to discuss more especially Speaker 5 33:32so we are almost ready for breakouts and refreshments. Carl Pro 33:37But I had a quick question on the what I call your misinformation or BS software, I spent my lunch time reading through like 25 or 30 websites to try to pick out the same story and read them and all to find out where the truth is. Your system would probably be great to have some independent calculation of current events, without the biases. Dan Brahmy 34:10We have been, not we've been we've been dreaming of eventually creating that stamp of trust within us that we that we spoke about. So the short answer, what you said is, this is exactly what we're aiming at, which is being able to understand whether the source, so the actor who's pushing and propagating a certain narrative or a certain angle, whether it can be a trusted source. So is it a is it a real person? Is it a real journalist? Is it a fake journalist? Is it a but a sock puppet patrol, a spam account, you name it. There's another 10,000 we don't need to get into all the categories, but, but I think that that gives you know one portion of the answer that you're looking for, and and then we explain, just to give you slightly longer answer, we we sort of decipher what we call the behavioral patterns. So. So think about an MRI that says, how, how powerful and how fast does a piece of information fly out over social media? Is it only within the social media realm, or is it flying from social media, from Twitter to The Wall Street Journal and then back to Facebook, and then going back to tick tock. And then what kind of formats, right? So the speed and the strength, and then the third part of your question would be about the authenticity and the nature of the content itself. So not just the similarity, and is it copy paste, but actually, is it? Is it a deep fake? Is it is, you know, is a computer generating the pictures and the videos that we're looking at right now, and then you aggregate all this sort of answer into, should you ignore what you're seeing, watching, reading? Should you track it closely, because it might become a threat, slash an opportunity, depending which side you're on the scale, or the last point, which is, should you be so worried that you need to mitigate against that immediately? We you know you spoke about the drones, and we spoke about the the the Navy and how we could potentially leverage the unexplored territories. We've talked to three and four star generals, and we've talked to Secretaries of Navy, and we've talked to all these incredibly smart and powerful people that have the almighty power to shift territories and shift decision making process. And the funny thing is, they have made very costly decisions based on misinformation. They shifted entire armies, not small military operations. They have shifted dozens of planes, dozens of naval ships and 1000s of soldiers. What Mark Sanor 37:01so the first, so the first saner. His name was Sanor, who was Prussian. You know, we had a lot of hessian troops. So Michael Sanor was the aide de camp. Eventually, he was known as the Flying Dutchman. He stole the white horse. But for the battle of York title, it led to the victory, partly, where the French, because they were in New Jersey, where I live, their ovens kept baking the bread, and that was that deception to the troops. They fell. They're clearly still still up there. They're still eating when instead they they moved around and caught them by surprise. So we love the French information. And it was interesting that Macron came over to see Trump. But they will talk about these things, the breakouts. This is how we do breakouts. This comes this is a slide from 2011 12, when I would do these breakouts for Dennison. Anybody from Denison? You're close enough Denison people here, usually there's always one Michigan room makes little sister Council. But we would get together in round tables and then, and it would be the round table for fashion in New York, or for finance. And then we eventually get 300 people. And there were segments that we now have a round table for each of these panels. And like one physically is over there. It's probably a popular one next to the bar. Another one's over here, and we have the ones out there, out first, mingle, you know, stretch, move around again, and then I'll put on the screen where the round tables will be. And they will the format is basically no one dominates the conversation. There's no like alpha that just takes over. It's a round table. Everybody should introduce themselves what they're doing so that everybody knows and we all try to help each other. It's the same thing we did for the alumni. No one's asking for money. The school isn't asking for money. We're here to help each other. The same spirit here and for our family office world. So if someone's got some insights, you want some questions, let's ask the panel a little more information. You know, Alyssa, like you're in the ocean world, right? You should be a guest in this, well, deep tech, ocean tech world. And, you know, everybody should know each other. And and then we come back and we say two things, what did you learn? What are your takeaways? We'll come back here one more time, and one or two people will speak about it. And one of those takeaways is like, or is like, is there something we should do? Should we do a deep dive on ocean tech? Should we do a deep dive on, you Speaker 4 39:50know, may I say one more thing, just to give plug the ocean short time you don't Mark Sanor 39:55have a chance to do that. Okay? This is just the principles of it. Okay? And you want to know more about ocean Tech, I think Lisa will be near that bar over there. And so let's let's break. I'll come back to Mike 10 minutes or so. Let you know where the breakouts will be. Do the breakouts meet the people who are relevant to you. And that's that magic for what we do. Thank you everybody. Thank you. Panel. I'm joined our 361 firm community of investors and thought leaders. We have a lot of events created by the community as we collaborate on investments and philanthropic interests. Join us. You. You can subscribe to various 361 events and content at https://361firm.com/subs. For reference: Web: www.361firm.com/homeOnboard as Investor: https://361.pub/shortdiagOnboard Deals 361: www.361firm.com/onbOnboard as Banker: www.361firm.com/bankersEvents: www.361firm.com/eventsContent: www.youtube.com/361firmWeekly Digests: www.361firm.com/digest
This article from BOAT International discusses the burgeoning field of underwater habitats, focusing on two competing projects: Proteus, spearheaded by Fabien Cousteau, and Sentinel, developed by the UK-based DEEP. Both aim to create advanced underwater research stations to facilitate extended scientific study of the largely unexplored ocean depths. The article highlights the potential scientific breakthroughs these habitats could enable, emphasizing the significant knowledge gap in our understanding of the ocean and its vast biodiversity. It also acknowledges the considerable technological and financial challenges involved in constructing and operating such facilities. Finally, the article briefly explores the history of underwater habitats, showcasing previous projects and their contributions to ocean research. Original article : https://www.boatinternational.com/yachts/editorial-features/fabien-cousteau-proteus-underwater-habitat?fbclid=IwY2xjawG8Z_JleHRuA2FlbQIxMAABHcCjfeibbhuBmP3fUvrW1GoWJ9BU45KdGNGfzyWEIjp9dm2Tx4TrH9Hq-w_aem_yxFNgrG5G2PhnSMuRGnKOQ Note : conversation is AI generated. #underwater #ocean #scuba #underwaterhabitat #future #underwaterhotel #reasons #patreon #aquanaut #underwaterliving #ocean #cousteau #fabiencousteau #proteus https://discord.gg/jp5aSSkfNS http://atlantisseacolony.com/ https://www.patreon.com/atlantisseacolony
For full notes, photos, and video links, subscribe to Analog Explorer on Substack https://analogexplorer.substack.com/p/ae-23-fabien-cousteau-watch-collection-b42 Welcome to the finale of the “Undersea Explorer Series” by the Analog Explorer for the Made Under Pressure podcast! Fabien Cousteau almost needs no introduction. He is a renowned aquanaut, explorer, environmental advocate, and filmmaker who is one of the leading figures in ocean exploration and conservation. But deeper than that, he is a father, a vintage motorcycle enthusiast, and a friend of ours in the #watchfam. Throughout his career, Fabien Cousteau has demonstrated an unwavering commitment to the oceans. His immersive underwater missions, educational outreach, and innovative watch collaborations continue to inspire a global audience to appreciate and protect our planet's precious marine environments. Fabien's work stands as another beacon of hope and a call to action for the preservation of our underwater world. For more including full notes, photos, and links, subscribe or support to Analog Explorer on Substack - https://analogexplorer.substack.com/p/ae-23-fabien-cousteau-watch-collection-b42 --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/analogexplorer/support
EPISODE #1036 THE UFO INCIDENT THAT TRIGGERED DEFCON-1 Richard speaks with a UFO researcher who investigates incidents which have occurred in Atlantic Canada, including the Shag Harbour UFO incident. On this episode he discusses a little known UFO incident that predates Shag Harbour which almost triggered World War lll. GUEST: Chris Styles is an active UFO researcher who investigates select classic and current UFO incidents that have occurred in Atlantic Canada. He is best known for his work on the 1967 Shag Harbour Incident and has presented at several MUFON symposia in both Canada and the US. Chris served as a paid technical advisor with several Canadian UFO feature documentaries such as Ocean Entertainment's “The Shag Harbour Incident” and “Northern Lights”. He has appeared in several US, UFO specials, such as “Canada's Roswell” and “UFOs II, Have We Been Visited?” In 2019 Styles appeared in an episode of “Ocean Mysteries” with Celine & Fabien Cousteau. Chris is the co-author of two UFO books on the Shag Harbour Incident, “Dark Object” with Don Ledger; “Impact to Contact” with Graham Simms. His most recent book is “Sweep Clear 5: NATO's UFO Encounter”, available from Amazon Press. In 2023 MUFON Canada presented Chris with an honorary membership in recognition of his lifetime achievement in Ufology. BOOKS: Impact To Contact: The Shag Harbour Incident Dark Object: The World's Only Government-Documented UFO Crash Sweep Clear 5: NATO's UFO Encounter SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS!!! BIRCH GOLD GROUP - The Precious Metal IRA Specialists Diversify a portion of your savings into GOLD with Birch Gold Group. Gold is your hedge against inflation, and Birch Gold makes it EASY to own. Text STRANGE to 989898 and get your free info-kit on gold, then talk to a precious metals specialist on how to protect your savings from persistent inflation with gold. Text STRANGE to 989898 now. THE WELLNESS COMPANY - Own Your Wellness, Own Your Health, Own Your Freedom The comprehensive Med Kit is meticulously stocked with 8 potentially life saving medicines to address injuries and emergencies. It's your safety net for the unexpected. Visit https://www.twc.health/strangeplanet and secure your Emergency MED Kit. Use CODE STRANGEPLANET to receive 10% off BECOME A PREMIUM SUBSCRIBER!!! https://strangeplanet.supportingcast.fm Three monthly subscriptions to choose from. Commercial Free Listening, Bonus Episodes and a Subscription to my monthly newsletter, InnerSanctum. We and our partners use cookies to personalize your experience, to show you ads based on your interests, and for measurement and analytics purposes. By using our website and services, you agree to our use of cookies as described in our Cookie Policy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://strangeplanet.supportingcast.fm/
This episode was recorded at the Inter Astra Retreat just outside Washington DC last November (2023) where I had the pleasure of sitting down with Lisa Marrocchino, the CEO of Proteus Ocean Group. Starting in the world of Wall Street, Lisa has a profound passion for advancing our understanding of the ocean through innovative technologies. Proteus, is being designed as the 'International Space Station of the Ocean,' aiming to revolutionize our approach to sustained underwater research. In this episode, Lisa shares the inspiring origins of Proteus, conceived by co-founder Fabien Cousteau, Grandson of Jacques Cousteau, and the ambitious goals they have for this pioneering project. Lisa details the technological and scientific advancements they hope to achieve and the broader implications for environmental research and space exploration analogs. In this episode, you'll discover: Challenges and triumphs in creating a state-of-the-art research facility beneath the sea. The role of Proteus in simulating space mission conditions and its implications for future space travel. Collaborative initiatives with global scientific communities aimed at fostering significant advancements in ocean research. Lisa's aspirations for Proteus to leave a lasting impact by bridging the gap between oceanic exploration and space discovery. Quote: "Proteus isn't just about pushing the boundaries of ocean research; it's about creating a legacy that ties the mysteries of the ocean with the vastness of space." - Lisa Marrocchino Episode Links: Learn more about Proteus Ocean Group Connect with Lisa Marrocchino on LinkedIn Follow Inter Astra on LinkedIn Discover more about Inter Astra Credits: Production by CxS Partners LTD Executive Producer: Toby Goodman Audio & Sound Design: Lee Turner Artwork: Ryan Field Main interview recorded on location with Nomono Sound Capsule Explore more episodes at Kathy Sullivan Explores... https://kathysullivaneexplores.com/ Find even more podcasts on the Inter Astra Podcast Network HERE
Ciencia: una estación espacial bajo el agua; descubren en Almería el primer impacto de meteorito en la península ibérica; Cine: 'Mirando al Cielo' y 'Golpe de suerte'Gente, gente , en la última hora del programa hemos hablado sobre estos temas:Ciencia: El sueño de Fabien Cousteau, una estación subacuática de más de 1.200 metros a una profundidad de 20 metros en el mar Caribe. Jorge Alcalde, divulgador científico explica lo que esto supone para la ciencia marina. Además, descubren en Almería el primer impacto de un meteorito en la península ibérica.Cine: El crítico de Cine, Juan Orellana, comenta los estrenos de la semana: 'Golpe de suerte', 'Mirando al cielo' y en Trece, 'Perdición de Billy Wilder' Escucha ahora 'La Tarde', de 18 a 19 horas. 'La Tarde' es un programa presentado por Pilar Cisneros y Fernando de Haro que se emite en COPE, de lunes a viernes, de 16 a 19 horas con 470.000 oyentes diarios según el último EGM. A lo largo de sus tres horas de duración, "La Tarde" ofrece otra visión, más humana y reposada, de la actualidad, en busca de historias cercanas, de la cara real de las noticias; periodismo de carne y hueso.En "La Tarde" también hay hueco para los testimonios, los sucesos y los detalles más relevantes y a veces invisibles de todo lo que nos rodea. Esta temporada, Pilar y...
***To donate directly to the MAUI FIRES FUNDRAISER, please visit this page: https://ilimanator.com/maui/ *** Founder of @deepseamagazine Jeff Scott has launched so many locally-focused brands that I had trouble keeping up. In fact, I really wanted to know HOW he found time for them all, and do it so seamlessly. That was one of many questions I had the honor of asking him throughout the interview, but the main focus was on the new DeepSea Magazine channel. DeepSea channel has featured everyone from Fabien Cousteau, to the upcoming collaboration with Cristina Zenato. While DeepSea Mag took center stage, we also discussed his DeepSea Locker clothing brand, co branded by big-named conservationists such as Paul Degelder. Jeff's work in film production, advertising, content creation and of course, as a Navy Salvage Diver, gives him first-hand experience in all things “Made Under Pressure”, which is his signature trademark and tagline. Jeff creates and connects locally-based community pages including the “Stay Local” channels and clothing lines. These support outdoor recreation and conservation in areas he has experience working in, such as San Diego, Hawaii and of course, Lake Tahoe. He currently works directly with a local touring operation in Lake Tahoe called “Tahoe Guides”, where he is physically based. -- DeepSea Magazine: https://deepseamgzn.vhx.tv/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/deepseamagazine/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@deepseamagazine/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/deepseamagazine DeepSea Locker: https://www.deepseaco.com/ https://www.instagram.com/deepsealocker/ Tahoe Guides: https://www.laketahoetoursandrentals.com/ https://www.instagram.com/tahoeguides/ Stay Local Lake Tahoe: https://www.staylocalstore.com/ Stay Local Hawaii - https://www.instagram.com/staylocal.hawaii/ Stay Local San Diego - https://www.instagram.com/staylocal.sd/ Shark Research Unit: https://www.instagram.com/sharkresearchunit/ https://shark-research.com/ — Kenny Dyal is the host of The Scuba Diving Podcast: TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@kenny_dyal Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sweetwater_scuba Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/realkennydyal LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/kennydyal Twitter: https://twitter.com/RealKennyDyal www.sweetwaterscuba.com
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Join SFS host, Matt Whyte and SFS social media manager, Bailey Constas for a curated peak at some of Season Two's Best Moments! Featuring SIA with psychotherapist, Dr. Alexandra Katehakis, Lamb of God's Randy Blythe with social psychologist, Dr. Tony Lemieux, Jose González with epidemiologist, Dr. Mike Osterholm, Blondie's Debbie Harry and Chris Stein with climatologist, Dr. Michael Mann, and Majid Jordan with aquanaut, Fabien Cousteau.
Fabien Cousteau on the Historic Ocean Treaty Mar. 7, 2023
Fabien Cousteau 6th Florida Tour: Naples Conference & Miami Roundtable 2023
Chris Styles is an active UFO researcher who investigates select classic and current UFO incidents that have occurred in Atlantic Canada. He holds to a “blended” view of the UFO phenomena, that allows room for both the ETH & a significant psychological component. He is best known for his work on the 1967 Shag Harbour Incident and has presented at several MUFON symposia in both Canada and the US. Chris served as a paid technical advisor with several Canadian UFO feature documentaries such as Ocean Entertainment's “The Shag Harbour Incident” and “Northern Lights”. He has appeared in several US, UFO specials, such as “Canada's Roswell” and “UFOs II, Have We Been Visited?” In 2019 Styles appeared in an episode of “Ocean Mysteries” with Celine & Fabien Cousteau. Chris is the co-author of two UFO books on the Shag Harbour Incident, “Dark Object” (Dell Bantam) with Don Ledger & “Impact to Contact” (Arcadia House) with Graham Simms.Social Links: shagharbourufoexpo.com.Beyond The Tinfoil Hat is a weekly podcast brought to you by The Experiencer Support Association. Every week we dive into topics that are deep into the realm of the unknown. Ranging from topics between #ufos, #ghosts, and #monsters This podcast is hosted by Ryan Stacey and is designed to educate and assist the public in understanding the blend of every phenomenon happening in the world. Our guests often include eyewitness testimony.www.experiencersupport.org
In this episode, we are speaking with Fabien Cousteau, Aquanaut, Oceanographic Explorer, Environmental Advocate and Founder of Fabien Cousteau Ocean Learning Center & Proteus Ocean Group. As the first grandson of Jacques-Yves Cousteau, Fabien spent his early years aboard his famous grandfather's ships. He is well known for his study of sharks and from 2000-2002, and was also an Explorer-at-Large for National Geographic. Having spent his life raising awareness, exploring and educating the world through multiple mediums about the ocean, he is now building a space station for the ocean. In this conversation, we talk about how our natural resource bank account is going bankrupt, why we need to change our language, under water exploration with the international space station for the ocean and what our most precious resource is. I hope you enjoy this smooth conversation thanks to our sound partner Audio-Technica. Okay, it's time to live wide awake. Stay connected with Fabien: Website: http://fabiencousteau.com/ Social media: https://twitter.com/FCousteau | https://www.instagram.com/fcousteau/ Stay connected & support the show Instagram: http://instagram.com/livewideawake Support: If you enjoyed the show do consider making a contribution so we can keep having conscious conversations - https://www.patreon.com/livewideawake Reach out: hola@stephldickson.com
Hello again and welcome to a new episode of the Aronnax podcast.This is the podcast looking at the transformation of the shipping, ocean and maritime space. It is a podcast looking at the people, the technology and the environment of the seas, which if you did not know is why I chose the name Aronnax.My name is Craig Eason and I run the Fathom World news website and help organisations with their events.Now, staying in the realm of French unwater science fiction, today's episode is about one dream to turn science fiction into a science fact.Fabien Cousteau is the grandson of Jacques Cousteau the French underwater explorer who revolutionised deep-water diving and filmmaking.His family has since taken up the storytelling and sense of underwater wonder he developed and it is his grand-son Fabien who has launched Proteus Group, a philanthropic business venture very much about opening a window to the opportunities under the ocean waves.A well-known diver, documentary film maker in his own right Fabien Cousteau launched Proteus Group with the aim of raising the funds to build a permanent deep water research habitat. A place where scientists could live for months at a time to conduct their search, and film makers can reveal the wonders of the seas.It was while I was moderating the recent IMO biofouling research and development Forum in London that I met Mark Patterson, Proteus chief scientist and experienced diver himself as well as Gary Rosewell, Proteus Partnership Director. Its their job to promote Proteus before any sponsors and to help make the Cousteau dream of a space station of the seas a reality. I sat down with Gary and Mark in a quiet room at the headquarters of the international maritime organisation to ask them about the project, and started by asking Mark Patterson where the original idea for the project came fromSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/aronnax. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Take our listener survey here to give feedback on the show! Originally aired - October 08, 2018Erika Bergman is a submarine pilot, engineer, and a National Geographic Explorer who will be taking Sir Richard Branson and Fabien Cousteau (grandson of famed ocean explorer Jacques Cousteau) on a submarine adventure into the depth of Belize's Great Blue Hole. In 2013 she received a National Geographic Explorers grant for her "Classrooms Under the Sea" expedition which live-streamed submarine expeditions to classrooms. She's a superb storyteller with many interesting tales and accomplishments to share!She is also the Founder of GEECs - Global Engineering & Exploration Counselors; providing a network of thrilling engineering camps to girls around the world.https://www.thegeecs.com/https://twitter.com/erika_bergman?lang=enSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/adventure-sports-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
This podcast features a conversation with Third Generation Ocean Explorer and Ocean Conservationist Fabien Cousteau. Fabien is an Aquanaut, Filmaker and Documentarian. In his youth he spent time aboard his grandfathers research vessel The Calypso. Here he learned about the importance of hard work and team effort to accomplish the many challenges required when exploring the vastness of our oceans. Fabien has been an Explorer at Large for National Geographic and has collaborated on many television specials. He has been featured in a multi hour series for PBS Called Ocean Adventures. He has founded the Fabien Cousteau Ocean Learning Center a non-profit 501c3 organization dedicated to the restoration of the worlds water-bodies thru active community engagement. Fabien shares with us his most recent project the Proteous Ocean Group. He also reflects on his time and preparation while on board the Aquarious Reef Base as team Leader of Mission 31. We discuss a number of aspects of fitness in diving, physical preparation and maintaining the necessary fitness to safely accomplish a safe diving mission.
Shark week maybe over, but Verbal Shenanigans is going to have you excited to sleep with the fishes one more time. Fabien Cousteau has been exploring the seas all his life as an explorer, a conservationist, and TV and film personality. We get insights from him on living this life with grandfather Jacques and father Jean-Michel, discuss the sensationalism in television, breaking world records underwater, and even his favorite water life to observe. An enjoyable and educational conversation for all. We also get an update on Mike's Disney bathroom, Scott's trip to Germany, and learn about some interesting filed trips Mike had as a child.
We speak with Fabien Cousteau, third generation ocean explorer and documentary producer. Along with talking about his life and adventures – including in a one-man sub disguised as a white shark - we learn about his newest project. Having lived 31 days underwater doing science and education in an aging habitat off Key Largo, he's now working to build a larger “international space station for the ocean,” to be located in the Caribbean and carry out the next generation of marine science and conservation. Rising Tide, the Ocean Podcast is co-hosted by Blue Frontier's David Helvarg and the Inland Ocean Coalition's Vicki Nichols-Goldstein. This podcast aims to give you information, inspiration and motivation (along with a few laughs) to help understand our ocean world and make it better. The ocean is rising, and so are we!Learn more at bluefront.org
Canadian R&B duo Majid Jordan speak with aquanaut Fabien Cousteau (grandson of Jacques Cousteau) about the construction of his monolithic underwater space station, Proteus and marine conservation.
CarneyShow 11.18.21 Fabien Cousteau, Kurtis Blow, Ahmad Rashad, Marshall Brain, Martin Kilcoyne by
Fabien Cousteau is many things — Oceanographic Explorer, Environmental Advocate, famed Aquanaut, Producer, and Community Builder. As Jacques-Yves Cousteau's first grandson, the apple didn't fall far from the tree. Fabien's passion for the ocean and its environmental impact began early in life when he joined his grandfather's oceanic expeditions. Since then, he has become an Explorer-At-Large for National Geographic and appeared on numerous major television networks. He has spearheaded multiple cause-driven charities and environmental projects, and founded the Fabien Cousteau Ocean Learning Center (OLC) to make a positive change in the world.In this episode, he reveals what drove him to create OLC and how it's currently providing people with the opportunity to be part of the solution. How do language and our everyday decisions influence our communities? What was it like to live in the ocean for a month during the world's longest science expedition ever? And what can businesses do to operate more sustainably? Get inside the curious mind of an ambitious explorer impacting the world today.
Supply chain crisis backing up the Port of L.A., and the impact on business; Catherine Coleman Flowers on America's water and wastewater woes; the Salton Sea dries up, causing a health hazard; Fabien Cousteau explores the ocean floor for human habitat; the Soul Box Project shows loss to gun violence.
What are the small steps we can take to protect the planet and its oceans for future generations? Melissa Biggs Bradley sits down with aquanaut and filmmaker Fabien Cousteau to talk about his underwater adventures, his passion for sharks(!), ocean conservation and his latest project Proteus—and why travel is the best classroom for life. https://www.fabiencousteauolc.org/
It's Shark Week, let's discuss sharks. Georgia Aquarium you can dive with Sharks Shark cage dive https://www.georgiaaquarium.org/experience/shark-cage-dive/ Whale shark dive https://www.georgiaaquarium.org/experience/journey-with-gentle-giants-swim/ Fabien Cousteau shark submarine https://youtu.be/uzw_3plLkVA Shark info https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Films_about_sharks http://atlantisseacolony.com/ https://www.patreon.com/atlantisseacolony #scuba #underwater #ocean #underwaterhabitat #future #community
Blue Latitudes as a marine environmental consulting company with a non profit foundation understands the often-complex environmental issues that face the offshore energy industry and has developed relationships with both federal and state regulatory agencies that are based on a shared goal to manage offshore resources in a way that is both environmentally sustainable and fiscally responsible. Some of the Earth's greatest opportunities for conservation lie at the intersection of industry and the environment. The dynamic duo at the helm of this planet forward operation, marine scientist Amber Sparks and environmental scientist Emily Hazelwood, (both made the Forbes 30 under 30 list in the energy sector and met at Scripps Institute of Oceanography), have seen the human demand for ocean resources increase incrementally, and have laid solid plans to broaden the dialog on traditional ocean conservation practices to find ways to use our oceans without using them up! Their credo is profound; to elevate the traditional concept of ocean stewardship by uniting government, industry and the community to work together to conserve our oceans! In doing so, their foundation and consulting business, strives to explore innovative solutions to traditional marine conservation challenges, by uniting science, policy, and communications to develop sustainable, creative and cost-effective solutions to manage the environmental issues that surround the offshore energy industry. Today, they work with government and industry around the world to develop RtR strategies and, using remotely operated vehicles, literally diving into the deepest depths of the ocean to evaluate the marine ecosystems found on deep offshore energy structures. LEARN MORE ABOUT BLUE LATITUDES FOUNDATION here: Twitter Feed: https://twitter.com/Rig2ReefExplore Blue Latitudes Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluelatitudesfoundation/?hl=en Blue Latitudes Website: https://www.bluelatitudesfoundation.org/ Blue Latitudes on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-blue-latitudes-foundation Amber Sparks LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/amber-sparks-a0b0653b Emily Hazelwood LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/emily-hazelwood/ Rigs to Reefs NY Times: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ot-UsUwhaec Rigs to Reefs TEDX: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cva3EuaUMCs Science TV: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKCn5-UXt_9t4o3nyzH2YIg Emily talks to Fabien Cousteau: https://www.conncoll.edu/news/cc-magazine/past-issues/2020-issues/summer-2020/water/ Diving In: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9Vt82JZu04 Deep Elite Team: https://www.instagram.com/scubapro/ Start Blue UCSD: https://startblue.ucsd.edu/ "The future of ocean conservation is no longer us against them, we need to find opportunities to work together to conserve our oceans.” — Amber & Emily, Co-Presidents TO SUGGEST A GUEST YOU CAN REACH US here: guest@ourepicocean.com or take the EPIC OCEAN CHALLENGE follow this link: https://www.ourepicocean.com/challengevid
Já surfou uma onda de 35 metros – o equivalente a um prémio de 12 andares, mais ou menos – mas também já foi pescador, professor e estudante de psicologia. Hugo Vau é o único português que pertence à elite do Explorer’s Club, fundado em 1904 e que inclui membros como o primeiro explorador no Polo Norte, na lua ou no Monte Evereste. Por estes dias, Hugo Vau está também na Glex Summit 2021, uma cimeira que está a acontecer em Lisboa e nos Açores sobre as missões científicas que estão a marcar o mundo, ao lado de astronautas, biólogos, realizadores, vulcanólogos ou conservacionistas – pessoas como Alan Stern, astrofísico da NASA; ou Fabien Cousteau, aquanauta e documentarista. Hoje, recebemos Hugo Vau.
On this month's episode of The Ocean Decade Show, Taylor is joined by aquanaut, communicator, educator, and 3rd generation ocean explorer Fabien Cousteau and Northeastern University's Dr. Brian Helmuth on an episode guaranteed to make you smile. The trio discuss the importance of the “Inspiring and Engaging” goal of the Ocean Decade and how Cousteau's proposed “international space station under the sea” Proteus contributes to the essential ocean literacy work that needs to be done over the next ten years.
This week on Catch Our Drift, we are exploring the parallel realms of Outer Space and Inner Space as we gaze at the stars and also turn our eyes downwards to contemplate the vast ocean depths.We're delighted to be joined by astronaut and aquanaut Kathy Sullivan – the only woman to have walked both in space and descend to the ocean's greatest depth. Who better to tell us about both worlds? Fabien Cousteau shares his plans to build Proteus, the ocean's equivalent of the International Space Station, an underwater habitat that will enable aquanauts to live on the seabed for weeks at a time. And ice cream seller turned oceanographer Craig Donlon discusses his work at the European Space Station monitoring the impacts of climate change on our ocean from space.
In this episode we're joined with Fabien Cousteau, a researcher and explorer who has explored the ocean for his entire life. Fabien has been working hard to get funding for Proteus, which he claims will be the "ISS of the Ocean". He is working on a long-term living facility that would put scientists and divers under the waves for months at a time. We discuss the project as well as his other explorations under the sea. Fabien's website: https://www.fabiencousteauolc.org Find us on twitter @BlueEarthPod. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/blueearth/support
Fabien Cousteau is a 3rd generation ocean explorer and aquanaut who is taking the next step in ocean exploration by venturing into the world’s largest and most advanced underwater research station called Proteus. He shares his journey and hope for the future of life below water. Leave a review, send a screenshot to be@real-leaders.com and we'll give you a free year of Real Leaders digital magazines! Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5bqb479JSl0
Mission 31 Aquarius, the last remaining underwater laboratory at a depth of 63 feet, 9 miles off the coast of Florida. Fabien Cousteau leads a team of aquanauts who are studying the ocean, its marine life and the relationship with the future of our civilization. We discuss the possibility and difficulties of living underwater indefinitely, the effect our lives have on the ocean and the consequences for the entire ecosystem. A cautionary tale, Cousteau lets us know it is not too late to move in the right direction.
#cousteau #conshelf #facebook #twitch #youtube #underwater #ocean #scuba #proteus Taken from our weekly live stream on Facebook, Twitch and YouTube. Brendon and Adam discuss the Conshelf program from the 60s, where it might be today and how Fabien Cousteau's Proteus plays in to all of this. Associated Slide Show https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1Oe975IUPRckx2P3qQ5_feHqea8NUuxvmNr_f6VVQi5w/edit?usp=sharing https://www.cousteau.org/legacy/technology/conshelf/ https://scubadiverlife.com/diving-history-jacques-cousteaus-conshelf-missions/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continental_Shelf_Station_Two https://medium.com/predict/historical-underwater-habitat-showcase-conshelf-1-aka-diogenes-24687f639b14 https://medium.com/predict/historical-underwater-habitat-showcase-continental-shelf-station-three-90830d2ff0be https://www.thevintagenews.com/2016/03/24/jacques-cousteaus-underwater-colonies-from-the-1960s-copy/ https://youtu.be/8BtsK4uE9-E http://atlantisseacolony.com/ https://www.patreon.com/atlantisseacolony
Time to take a look at some of the highlights of our episodes that took us to the Ocean. Today we revisit our interniews with sea turtle expert Carlee Jackson, underwater photographer Keith Ellenbogan & famed oceanographer Fabien Cousteau.
Fabien Cousteau, one of Jacques Cousteau's grandsons and himself an aquanaut, is helping plan the largest, most advanced underwater research station yet. Learn how the PROTEUS station will work in this episode of BrainStuff. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
In this episode we will talk to Fabien Cousteau and hear about his new project called Proteus. It is a bold project to build a 4,000 square foot lab under the sea. This was recorded on CLUBHOUSE under the ULTRAMARINE Ocean Club which takes place every week.
Petit-fils du commandant Cousteau, Fabien Cousteau voudrait voir naître, au fond de la mer des Caraïbes, une veste base sous-marine. Habitation et lieu de travail, cette station, nommée Proteus, ferait progresser les connaissances sur les océans, pour le plus grand profit de la science... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Ocean conservationist Fabien Cousteau [koo-STOH] and Swiss industrial designer Yves Béhar unveiled plans for an ambitious underwater research center. The facility is named after the Greek ocean deity Proteus and will be located 60 feet beneath the surface of the Caribbean Sea. Once completed, the structure will span 4,000 square feet and accommodate up to 12 researchers at a time. Cousteau, the grandson of a famed ocean explorer, envisions Proteus to be the underwater counterpart of the International Space Station. The aquatic research center will aid scientists in discovering new marine species, better understanding the effects of climate change on oceans, and testing new technology for ocean exploration. Béhar, who is in charge of Proteus's architecture, designed the facility to be modular so it can be customized and upgraded as needed. He imagines Proteus as a two-level facility with small pods attached around it. The main spaces will serve as areas where scientists can interact with one another. The small pods, on the other hand, will house laboratories, sleeping quarters, and medical bays. Proteus will be equipped with a greenhouse where researchers can grow fresh food, and it will be powered by renewable energy. Cousteau hopes that through Proteus, other researchers will be encouraged to give more attention and funding to ocean exploration. According to him, exploring the ocean is far more important than traversing space because the vast waters serve as the life support system of humans. The Earth's oceans make up about 71% of the planet's surface, but less than 20% of them have been mapped, and only 5% have been explored.
Fabien Cousteau is an ocean conservationist and documentary filmmaker. As the first grandson of Jacques-Yves Cousteau, Fabien spent his early years aboard his grandfather's ships Calypso and Alcyone; learning how to scuba dive on his fourth birthday.You will enjoy hearing interesting stories about Fabien's granddad's expeditions and the important work that Fabien is doing now to protect our oceans and its wildlife.Support the show (https://solar-fit.com/contact-us/)
Fabien Cousteau is looking to build PROTEUS, a 4,000 square foot underwater research station that has research facilities, a multimedia production studio and an underwater greenhouse. A much more productive use of underwater space than Dr. No and SPECTRE had. Plus: the Racine Art Museum has brought back the annual Peeps Art Exhibition, and this year's submissions are extremely sweet. Fabien Cousteau Is Building PROTEUS, an Underwater 'International Space Station' (HowStuffWorks) RAM 11th Annual International PEEPS Art Exhibition (Racine Art Museum) Whether you're on the surface or under the sea, join us as a Cool Weird Awesome backer on Patreon --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/coolweirdawesome/message
Get your red cap and your Aqualung! This is not a drill, people, we've got Fabien Cousteau on the show! In this extra-long chat, Jason reconnects with Fabien to talk all things under-the-sea. From his latest project Proteus to classic undersea habitats and water-powered watches, we even learn about how a birthday request for fried chicken ended up starting this Cousteau's prolific career under the water. Before we dive into the interview (sorry), Jason and James chat about Jason's first time watching Predator, one of James' most Vancouver-themed watches, watch-themed t-shirts, and the mechanical problem that saw Jason's classic land rover taking a trailer to the shop. Stay in the mix for Jason's Cousteau-appropriate final notes and James' ramblings about the latest supercar from the man that made the F1. A huge thank you to Fabien Cousteau for being on the show and to you for listening! 10:22 Shane Black's “The Predator” https://imdb.to/2XNfhZW 14:35 Arnold Schwarzenegger on Reddit https://bit.ly/2XP41vM 16:00 Jason's “Safarnie" review https://bit.ly/31DxpGM 16:35 Halios Roldorf LE Seaforth https://bit.ly/2XKkYrt 17:40 Roldorf & Co "Red Sub" T-Shirt https://bit.ly/3ixVllo 18:55 Garmin Instinct Solar Tactical https://bit.ly/31FlLev 23:00 Mission31 http://bit.ly/35A8yUZ 30:30 Proteus https://bit.ly/3ivG053 1:03:44 “Legends of the Deep” (TV series with Jean-Michel, Fabien, and Celine Cousteau) https://imdb.to/3fOAFnJ 1:06:45 Jake's Rolex Blog article about Cousteau family watches https://bit.ly/3izFXVF 1:14:55 Fabien on Instagram http://bit.ly/2Gr6y8Q 1:16:09 World Without Sun https://bit.ly/30N47WO 1:18:15 Gordon Murray on The Collecting Cars Podcast with Chris Harris http://bit.ly/36fpUa3 1:21:15 Henry Catchpole's Carfection video with Gordon Murray https://bit.ly/30LhTJn
Fabien Cousteau is a 3rd generation ocean explorer and aquanaut who is taking the next step in ocean exploration by venturing into the world’s largest and most advanced underwater research station. He shares his journey and hope for the future of life below water.
Greg Stone spends time with aquanaut Fabien Cousteau, an old friend and dive partner, about his passion for the exploration of the undersea world. From his next underwater habitat Proteus to memories of his previous underwater immersion, Mission 31, Fabien engages us with his unique history being part of the Cousteau legacy. Join us with a candid and interesting conversation between two of the ocean's biggest advocates. Join us on July 30, 2020 @ 5:30 PM EDT Take part in our interactive virtual event and learn all about our innovative Coral Reef Restoration Program and team fundraising campaign. Discover how we are creating new hope for a critical ecosystem by combining innovative technology and art with some of the oceans prominent influencers. Joining Fabien are special guests; Celia Gregory, The Marine Foundation Justin Muir, City Aquarium Jeremy McKane, Artist, Ocean Warrior, Explorer If you'd like to participate or share you can find more information here: https://www.fabiencousteauolc.org/ocean-connection-campaign
Fabien Cousteau - Love What You Know and Giant Groupers - The ever-expanding family legacy of the Cousteau's is creating, knowledge, understanding and love for the ocean. The leader of this generation is Fabien Cousteau who's changing the way we study the ocean through greater access. This episode features Jeremy McKane co-hosting with Pete A Turner. The oceans are vital to every living thing's success. You can help by visiting PLEASE donate and help keep Fabien and the team in the ocean. Haiku31 Days DownStudying the Ocean BlueFamily TraditionSimilar episodes: Herbert Nitsch Kaj Larsen Laird Hamilton Join us in supporting Save the Brave as we battle PTSD. Executive Producer/Host/Intro: Pete A. Turner Producer: Damjan Gjorgjiev The Break It Down Show is your favorite best, new podcast, featuring 5 episodes a week with great interviews highlighting world-class guests from a wide array of topics. Get in contact with Pete at peteaturner.com
This week the Solve It team welcomes famed Aquanaut, Oceanographic Explorer, Environmental Advocate and Founder of The Fabien Cousteau Ocean Learning Center, Fabien Cousteau. Fabien tells us what it is like to live, explore and go to the bathroom under water.
#sharks #duolingo #fabiencousteau
# fabiencousteau #sharks #duolingo #podcast #super
Fabien Cousteau, grandson of legendary ocean explorer Jacques Cousteau, was just a boy when he fell in love with a creature that most other people fear: sharks. But no one could have predicted that years later, Fabien would do the unthinkable…and decide to live among them. A transcript of this episode is available at https://podcast.duolingo.com.
This week on Colonize the Ocean podcast, Adam and Brendon discuss the big news for the past week. Fabien Cousteau and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute the oceans as well as Fabien's plans for a new underwater research habitat, Proteus. https://youtu.be/MnNfavbPFlg Proteus official website. https://www.fabiencousteauolc.org/proteus Help support us on Patreon. https://www.patreon.com/atlantisseacolony http://colonizetheocean.com/ http://atlantisseacolony.com/
CEO and founder of Raine magazine, Nova Lorraine, joins us on this weeks episode of Everybody Eats. Award winning designer, Nova Lorraine, capitalized on her Masters in Clinical Psychology and degree in fashion design to launch Raine, an international multimedia platform that features the next big names in fashion, culture and technology. Over the past 12 years with Raine, Nova has interviewed some of the world’s most interesting entrepreneurs, socialites and cultural innovators, such as Mark Cuban, Nicky Hilton, Viscountess Emma Thynn, Fabien Cousteau, Kendall Jenner, Ben Carson, and Daymond John, to name a few. Our first segment we discuss her story of persistence and determination as she overcame many obstacles in order to be an icon in fashion and media. For the quote of the day, Edem has the quote which leads to discussion about the amazing women in our lives and the impact they’ve had. Lastly, we give our piece on two Instagram posts. The first being from Prince Donnell, which he speaks about never losing your confidence and the other from Ash Cash about doing more telling and less asking, aka assumptive selling. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
It was an honor to speak with Fabien Cousteau (Aquanaut, Ocean Conservationist, and Documentary Filmmaker) during the Cinex Smart Investment Summit on August 28th, 2019 in Curacao. Fabien has clear ideas about human evolution, and is committed to the restoration of the world's water bodies through active community engagement and education.Hope you enjoy hearing our conversation, and remember to like, share and subscribe to my channel. Thank you! :-)
As summer ends, we revisit our interviews with Matt Smith, Fabien Cousteau, and more.
The world-renowned oceanographic explorer, conservationist, and grandson of Jacques Cousteau discusses his foundation’s work to save the oceans from pollution and climate change through innovative technologies. The post Fabien Cousteau Talks Ocean Conservation & Climate Change appeared first on Phil & Co..
This week, Mitchell interviews the world-renowned conservationist, ocean-protector, Jacques-Yves Cousteau's grandson, FabienCousteau who has continued and advanced the family's important legacy. Fabien spent his early years aboard his famous grandfather's ships, Calypso and Alcyone; and learning how to scuba dive on his fourth birthday. He is well known for his study of sharks and from 2000-2002, Fabien was an Explorer-at-Large for National Geographic and collaborated on a TV special aimed at changing public conceptions about sharks called, “Attack of the Mystery Shark,”. Then in 2003-2006, he produced the documentary, “Mind of a Demon,” that aired on CBS. With the help of a large crew, Fabien created a 14-foot, 1,200-pound, lifelike shark submarine called “Troy” that enabled him to immerse himself inside the shark world, providing viewers with a rare view of the mysterious and often misunderstood creatures. For the next four years (2006-2010), Fabien was part of a multi-hour series for PBS called, “Ocean Adventures” with his father, Jean-Michel Cousteau, and sister, Céline. Inspired by his grandfather's famous 1978 PBS series, “The Cousteau Odyssey”. Fabien will be the keynote speaker at the 12th Annual Earth & World Peace Celebration on Sunday, April 21 in NYC. Mitchell will be the host & MC. For more, go to: www.planetheart.org. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/abwmitchellrabin/support
In honor of Mother Earth, a special event is going to be discussed called Planet Heart Annual World Peace Earth Day Celebration on Sunday, April 21, 3-8pm. This is a special event, the 12th annual celebration that friend of A Better World, Andy Kaen, has produced., Mitchell is the MC, Fabien Cousteau is the keynote speaker, and much good music, speakers and joy will be integral parts of the event. To register, call:Andy at: 646 765-7890. Patricia Anne Davis, MA. Patricia has spent a life time learning and practicing healing knowledge and processes, beginning with her own father, who was a medicine person who made his lifetime priority healing three generations of people in ceremonies. He was her teacher from birth in the home and in ceremonies until his transition in 1983. David Gilller & Helene Abrams, together as Transformational Strategists for Positive Change, they have designed arts and educational-based enrichment programs for entire communities, such as schools, parents, organizations, businesses & municipalities. Programs focus on building self-esteem & character development, mastering daily stress and creating a positive mindset. See:Think Positive World Mitchell Rabin is the Founder, President and CEO of A Better World Foundation & Media, with a background in psychology stress management, acupuncture & social enterprise. He has been a consultant to business leaders and CEOs of green and health-oriented start-ups over the past 25 years. He is an impassioned humanitarian, environmentalist and social entrepreneur using media & business as agents for change who has been working with clients and business for decades. See: www.abetterworld.tv www.mitchellrabin.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/abwmitchellrabin/support
Despite its party band reputation, B-52's frontman Fred Schneider says life hasn't always been so glamorous. He takes us back to the band's beginnings and explains how he keeps tapping into new ways to be creative in his 60s. Then, the grandson of famed oceanographer Jacques Cousteau offers up a dire warning for us all and a plan for taking action to save our oceans. Plus, an expert on budget living explains the difference between being cheap and being frugal.
Lisa Niver is a travel expert, writer, artist, entrepreneur, and on-camera host who has explored 96 countries. Niver has established a following through her written and video content, garnering over one million video views on YouTube, Amazon Fire Tv and Roku. Niver is the founder of a top 100 travel blog, We Said Go Travel, that reaches more than 200,000 annually and is in the top 1/8 of the top 1% of all sites in the United States. In her tri-annual international travel writing competitions, she has published nearly 2000 writers from 75 countries. She was invited to the United Nations as a Champions of Humanity ambassador, to the red carpet at the Oscars with United Airlines and to New Orleans for a project with American Express and Starwood Hotels. Her recent stories include Dutch designer villas for Luxury Magazine, interviewing Fabien Cousteau for Delta Sky, skiing with the blind for Sierra and scuba diving in the Solomon Islands for Smithsonian. She also contributes to USA Today, Wharton Business Magazine, the Jewish Journal and is verified on Twitter. Niver was a 2012 nominee for the Presidential Award for Excellence in Math and Science Teaching and a 2014 nominee for the Charles Bronfman Prize.
Ryan Lapete had a career as a deep-sea diver before starting his craft brewery. He studied underwater crime scene investigation, lived underwater for a month, and participated in a mission with Fabien Cousteau, grandson of Jacques Cousteau. His job was dangerous, and after telling his wife he'd leave it behind if he could start a brewery, he founded DEEP Brewing. Lapete shares how his diving experience helps him in brewing craft beer (quite a bit, actually), how being named 2017's Best New Florida Brewery impacted his business, and he spills the beans on a whole season of coffee beer releases. We also talk about the awesome artwork at his brewery and on his labels, and the difference in alcohol distribution laws in Florida and here in Georgia. Beer Guys Radio Craft Beer Podcast 144 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts (Make sure to leave us a review!) Subscribe on Google Podcasts Follow us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter Support us on Patreon | Supporters can get early access to all shows, commercial-free episodes, Beer Guys swag, and more.
Dive deep into oceans terrestrial and celestial as Neil deGrasse Tyson chats with oceanographer Sylvia Earle, aquanaut Fabien Cousteau, co-host Scott Adsit, ocean conservationist Laure Katz, actor/environmentalist Adrian Grenier, and submarine pilot Erika Bergman. NOTE: StarTalk All-Access subscribers can listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://www.startalkradio.net/all-access/exploring-earths-oceans-with-sylvia-earle-and-fabien-cousteau/ Photo Credit: Amanda Meyer/USFWS.
Fabien Cousteau, oceanographer, joins us along with panelists Paula Poundstone, Tom Papa, and Negin Farsad.
S&U! talks the health of our oceans with Fabien Cousteau. A marine biologist turned photographer, a Staten Island facility preserving NYC native plant life and a meteorologist studying jetstreams bring awareness to the issues our climate faces.
Happy Basel Fools Day watchfam! On this episode AJ & Chris give their PNW view on the Basel World watch show. If you are into horology or watches, you'll want to check out this episode as it is dedicated to the PNW watchfam. Note: at time of recording for our national and international listeners1 CHF (Swiss Franc) is equal to 1.06 USD1 Euro equals 1.24 USD*Observations*: Finally! Watches are going back to mortal sizes, 36mm, 39mm, 41mm * https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/longines-legend-diver-36mm-hands-on * http://wornandwound.com/baselworld-2018-introducing-the-oris-divers-sixty-five-bronze-bezel-in-36-and-40mm/Day one and the two GMT's the broke the watchfam internet: * Worn and WOund Podcast from Baselworld http://wornandwound.com/the-worn-wound-podcast-baselworld-2018-day-one-does-not-dissapoint/ Adventure Time on your Wrist* *Rolex* * GMT Master II Stainless (Pepsi) https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/rolex-gmt-master-ii-steel-new-video * priced (https://monochrome-watches.com/rolex-gmt-master-ii-pepsi-126710-blro-steel-jubilee-bracelet-calibre-3285-baselworld-2018-price/) at *CHF 8,800 ** *Tudor* * Black Bay GMT Stainless (Pepsi) https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/tudor-black-bay-gmt-new-video * Price (https://monochrome-watches.com/tudor-black-bay-gmt-pepsi-bezel-79830rb-baselworld-2018-price/) is set at *CHF 3.700* on the bracelet and *CHF 3.400* on the strap * Black Bay Fifty-Eight * A classically-sized 39mm with new version of Tudor's manufacture movement https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/tudor-black-bay-fifty-eight-introducing * *Price:* $3,250 (leather or fabric) $3,575 (steel)* *Breitling* * Navitimer is redefined and in the vein of the brands new branding * The Breitling Navitimer 8 B35 Automatic Unitime 43 https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/breitling-navitimer-8-unitime-43-hands-on * $8,140 on the leather strap and $8,520 on the steel bracelet* *Blancpain* * *Bathyscaphe Quantième Annuel (https://www.deployant.com/new-release-blancpain-baselworld-2018/) * * “This annual calendar fully accounts for all the irregularities in the length of months except for February, thus requiring adjustment only once per year at the end of that month.” * new caliber, the 6054.P, based upon Blancpain’s in-house twin-barrel 1150 movementSmart and HybridJean-Claude Biver On The Future Of The Connected Watch (VIDEO (https://www.hodinkee.com/videos/jean-claude-biver-on-the-future-of-the-connected-watch))* *Frederique Constant* * pre-Basel announced (https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/frederique-constant-hybrid-manufacture-smartwatch-introducing) a hybrid smartwatch (*Price:* $3,495- $3,795)* *Alpina (link (https://www.fratellowatches.com/alpinerx-outdoors-watch-by-alpine/))* * goes crowd source on Kickstarter (https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/536565656/alpinerx-the-most-beautiful-outdoors-smartwatch) - AlpinerX https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O3m2i61ZBUg * Early Bird Pricing: 530 CHF * At time (https://monochrome-watches.com/alpina-alpinerx-launches-on-kickstarter-and-its-selling-like-hotcakes/)of recording $635,586 pledged of $52,325 goal* Sequent (https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1608034664/sequent-the-worlds-first-kinetic-self-charging-sma/posts/2144318): remember they are supposed to be shipping April 2018 * “Speaking about production, we would like to inform you that we are getting ready for assembly. Firstly around 100 pieces should be assembled to see if everything is ok and right after that it will go by hundreds.” Neo Classics * *Tissot* * Antimagnetique Heritage 2018 Handwound (link (https://www.fratellowatches.com/the-new-handwound-tissot-antimagnetique-heritage-2018/)) * Slim, classic, reasonably priced, 50m water resist, 43mm case, * Price 1000 Euro* *Oris* * Pointer Date Heritage https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/oris-pointer-date-heritage-introducing * now available in either 36mm or 40mm case size * *Price:* CHF 1,550 (strap), CHF 1,750 (bracelet)* *NOMOS* Glashütte * Tangente Neomatik 41 https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/nomos-glashutte-tangente-neomatik-41-update-introducing * 40.5MM * *Price:* $4,100 * 41 mm, height 10.5 mm https://www.deployant.com/new-release-nomos-autobahn-for-baselworld-2018/Seiko* Seiko * Tide and Time video “8 of the best eiko watches from Basel 2018” (4 minutes) * https://timeandtidewatches.com/video-8-best-seikos-basel-2018/ * *Seiko 1968 Automatic Diver’s Re-creation SLA025 Limited Edition** *(LINK) (https://www.fratellowatches.com/the-year-of-the-diver-seiko-prospex-at-baselworld-2018/) * Hi-Beat 6159 diver 36,000 bph automatic movement. * Monocock case (everything loads through the crystal) * Limted to 1500 pieces approximately *$5,400 * * *Seiko 1968 Automatic Diver’s Modern Re-interpretation (6R15)* * http://wornandwound.com/baselworld-2018-introducing-seikos-newest-group-of-prospex-divers-refs-spb077-and-spb079/ * black-bezeled SPB077 comes on a stainless steel bracelet with a diver’s extension * $1,050 * blue-bezeled SPB079 on silicone dive strap * $850* Other Seiko mentions * Seiko Turtle “*Seiko Prospex Save the Ocean” a partnership with Fabien Cousteau (https://www.fabiencousteauolc.org/) and three new pieces to support his Ocean Learning Center 450 Euros.* * *Grandseiko* 20th anniversary of the 9S https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/grand-seiko-sbgh267-anniversary-introducing *$6,300 (limited to 1500 pieces) 39.5mm* * “Green Marine” update http://wornandwound.com/baselworld-2018-seiko-celebrates-50th-anniversary-of-the-ref-6159-7001-with-two-hi-beat-divers-ref-sla025-and-sla019/ Just cool$118k The Bulgari Octo Finissimo Tourbillon Automatic (VIDEO) breaks all record- including that SIHH Piaget concept watch we metioned https://www.hodinkee.com/videos/bulgari-octo-finissimo-tourbillon-automatic-new-videoConnect*AJ*: patreon.com/ajbarse (http://patreon.com/ajbarse) or follow on Instagram (http://instagram.com/ajbarse) @ajbarse AND an all new www.ajbarse.com (http://www.ajbarse.com/)*Chris*: bit.ly/quietchris (http://bit.ly/quietchris) or follow on Twitter (https://twitter.com/mnmltek)/Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/mnmltek/) @mnmltek. OR on Apple News (https://apple.news/TWOw28h-fRa229KO3HghIfg)*Twitter Hashtags*: #bhampodcast and #quietconversationListenIf you're in the Bellingham area, be sure to listen to our show on KMRE 102.3 FM (http://www.kmre.org/bellingham-podcast-media-tech/) Thursdays @ 9:00 am and Saturdays @ 1:30 pm.TalkGot a question about technology or anything else about life in Bellingham? Call 201-731-8324 (tel:2017318324) (TECH) and leave us a voicemail, and ask us nicely! We may include it in one of our future shows.SubscribeiTunes, Google Play Store, Soundcloud, Spreaker, TuneIn, or wherever else you podcast. And check out our website at bellinghampodcast.com (http://bellinghampodcast.com/)
Happy Basel Fools Day watchfam! On this episode AJ & Chris give their PNW view on the Basel World watch show. If you are into horology or watches, you'll want to check out this episode as it is dedicated to the PNW watchfam. Note: at time of recording for our national and international listeners1 CHF (Swiss Franc) is equal to 1.06 USD1 Euro equals 1.24 USD*Observations*: Finally! Watches are going back to mortal sizes, 36mm, 39mm, 41mm * https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/longines-legend-diver-36mm-hands-on * http://wornandwound.com/baselworld-2018-introducing-the-oris-divers-sixty-five-bronze-bezel-in-36-and-40mm/Day one and the two GMT's the broke the watchfam internet: * Worn and WOund Podcast from Baselworld http://wornandwound.com/the-worn-wound-podcast-baselworld-2018-day-one-does-not-dissapoint/ Adventure Time on your Wrist* *Rolex* * GMT Master II Stainless (Pepsi) https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/rolex-gmt-master-ii-steel-new-video * priced (https://monochrome-watches.com/rolex-gmt-master-ii-pepsi-126710-blro-steel-jubilee-bracelet-calibre-3285-baselworld-2018-price/) at *CHF 8,800 ** *Tudor* * Black Bay GMT Stainless (Pepsi) https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/tudor-black-bay-gmt-new-video * Price (https://monochrome-watches.com/tudor-black-bay-gmt-pepsi-bezel-79830rb-baselworld-2018-price/) is set at *CHF 3.700* on the bracelet and *CHF 3.400* on the strap * Black Bay Fifty-Eight * A classically-sized 39mm with new version of Tudor's manufacture movement https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/tudor-black-bay-fifty-eight-introducing * *Price:* $3,250 (leather or fabric) $3,575 (steel)* *Breitling* * Navitimer is redefined and in the vein of the brands new branding * The Breitling Navitimer 8 B35 Automatic Unitime 43 https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/breitling-navitimer-8-unitime-43-hands-on * $8,140 on the leather strap and $8,520 on the steel bracelet* *Blancpain* * *Bathyscaphe Quantième Annuel (https://www.deployant.com/new-release-blancpain-baselworld-2018/) * * “This annual calendar fully accounts for all the irregularities in the length of months except for February, thus requiring adjustment only once per year at the end of that month.” * new caliber, the 6054.P, based upon Blancpain’s in-house twin-barrel 1150 movementSmart and HybridJean-Claude Biver On The Future Of The Connected Watch (VIDEO (https://www.hodinkee.com/videos/jean-claude-biver-on-the-future-of-the-connected-watch))* *Frederique Constant* * pre-Basel announced (https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/frederique-constant-hybrid-manufacture-smartwatch-introducing) a hybrid smartwatch (*Price:* $3,495- $3,795)* *Alpina (link (https://www.fratellowatches.com/alpinerx-outdoors-watch-by-alpine/))* * goes crowd source on Kickstarter (https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/536565656/alpinerx-the-most-beautiful-outdoors-smartwatch) - AlpinerX https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O3m2i61ZBUg * Early Bird Pricing: 530 CHF * At time (https://monochrome-watches.com/alpina-alpinerx-launches-on-kickstarter-and-its-selling-like-hotcakes/)of recording $635,586 pledged of $52,325 goal* Sequent (https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1608034664/sequent-the-worlds-first-kinetic-self-charging-sma/posts/2144318): remember they are supposed to be shipping April 2018 * “Speaking about production, we would like to inform you that we are getting ready for assembly. Firstly around 100 pieces should be assembled to see if everything is ok and right after that it will go by hundreds.” Neo Classics * *Tissot* * Antimagnetique Heritage 2018 Handwound (link (https://www.fratellowatches.com/the-new-handwound-tissot-antimagnetique-heritage-2018/)) * Slim, classic, reasonably priced, 50m water resist, 43mm case, * Price 1000 Euro* *Oris* * Pointer Date Heritage https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/oris-pointer-date-heritage-introducing * now available in either 36mm or 40mm case size * *Price:* CHF 1,550 (strap), CHF 1,750 (bracelet)* *NOMOS* Glashütte * Tangente Neomatik 41 https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/nomos-glashutte-tangente-neomatik-41-update-introducing * 40.5MM * *Price:* $4,100 * 41 mm, height 10.5 mm https://www.deployant.com/new-release-nomos-autobahn-for-baselworld-2018/Seiko* Seiko * Tide and Time video “8 of the best eiko watches from Basel 2018” (4 minutes) * https://timeandtidewatches.com/video-8-best-seikos-basel-2018/ * *Seiko 1968 Automatic Diver’s Re-creation SLA025 Limited Edition** *(LINK) (https://www.fratellowatches.com/the-year-of-the-diver-seiko-prospex-at-baselworld-2018/) * Hi-Beat 6159 diver 36,000 bph automatic movement. * Monocock case (everything loads through the crystal) * Limted to 1500 pieces approximately *$5,400 * * *Seiko 1968 Automatic Diver’s Modern Re-interpretation (6R15)* * http://wornandwound.com/baselworld-2018-introducing-seikos-newest-group-of-prospex-divers-refs-spb077-and-spb079/ * black-bezeled SPB077 comes on a stainless steel bracelet with a diver’s extension * $1,050 * blue-bezeled SPB079 on silicone dive strap * $850* Other Seiko mentions * Seiko Turtle “*Seiko Prospex Save the Ocean” a partnership with Fabien Cousteau (https://www.fabiencousteauolc.org/) and three new pieces to support his Ocean Learning Center 450 Euros.* * *Grandseiko* 20th anniversary of the 9S https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/grand-seiko-sbgh267-anniversary-introducing *$6,300 (limited to 1500 pieces) 39.5mm* * “Green Marine” update http://wornandwound.com/baselworld-2018-seiko-celebrates-50th-anniversary-of-the-ref-6159-7001-with-two-hi-beat-divers-ref-sla025-and-sla019/ Just cool$118k The Bulgari Octo Finissimo Tourbillon Automatic (VIDEO) breaks all record- including that SIHH Piaget concept watch we metioned https://www.hodinkee.com/videos/bulgari-octo-finissimo-tourbillon-automatic-new-videoConnect*AJ*: patreon.com/ajbarse (http://patreon.com/ajbarse) or follow on Instagram (http://instagram.com/ajbarse) @ajbarse AND an all new www.ajbarse.com (http://www.ajbarse.com/)*Chris*: bit.ly/quietchris (http://bit.ly/quietchris) or follow on Twitter (https://twitter.com/mnmltek)/Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/mnmltek/) @mnmltek. OR on Apple News (https://apple.news/TWOw28h-fRa229KO3HghIfg)*Twitter Hashtags*: #bhampodcast and #quietconversationListenIf you're in the Bellingham area, be sure to listen to our show on KMRE 102.3 FM (http://www.kmre.org/bellingham-podcast-media-tech/) Thursdays @ 9:00 am and Saturdays @ 1:30 pm.TalkGot a question about technology or anything else about life in Bellingham? Call 201-731-8324 (tel:2017318324) (TECH) and leave us a voicemail, and ask us nicely! We may include it in one of our future shows.SubscribeiTunes, Google Play Store, Soundcloud, Spreaker, TuneIn, or wherever else you podcast. And check out our website at bellinghampodcast.com (http://bellinghampodcast.com/)
We talk regularly about the power of video and overcoming fear to get started. What do you think would happen to your business after 1.5 million video views? In this episode of the 10 Factor guest Lisa Niver takes us back to the beginning when she bought her first camera and edited her first video. Flash forward to today and after exploring 99 countries and sailing for seven years on the high seas, Lisa Niver is ready for more active adventures! She was a winner in the 59th annual 2017 Southern California Journalism Awards for her print column in The Jewish Journal. See her on KTLA TV talking about travel and find her We Said Go Travel videos with over 1.5 million views on Roku, Amazon Fire TV and YouTube. Her stories include Dutch designer villas for Luxury Magazine, interviewing Fabien Cousteau for Delta Sky, skiing with the blind for Sierra and WWII for Saturday Evening Post and Smithsonian. She is verified on both Twitter and Facebook and is the Adventure Correspondent for The Jet Set TV. Her latest projects are 50 new things before she is 50 and Facebook Live for USA Today 10 best. She has run 13 Travel Writing Awards publishing nearly 2000 writers from 75 countries and the first We Said Go Travel Photo Competition had over 500 entries. We Said Go Travel was read in 222 countries in 2017. In this episode of The 10 Factor find out: Where Lisa went for her first video editing lesson. You'll never guess... What it was like when Lisa only garnered about 100 views on her videos. How Lisa’s history books came to life. The importance of developing your own style. When and why Lisa decided to hire a media coach. The “F” word that you have to use when traveling. Tips that will help if you are new to video and even if you leverage video regularly. Connect with Lisa Niver: Connect with Lisa Niver: Lisaniver.com & wesaidgotravel.com Also find Lisa at WeSaidGoTravel on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest. JOIN our Community - become part of the family Visit us at the10factor.com To find out more and apply drop Tim an email. He'll reach out to you personally to see if you are a good fit. tim@the10factor.com Help Support our Show: Reviews Do Matter. We love to read our subscribers 5-star reviews on iTunes. Get a bonus thank you if yours gets read on the show. Leave us an honest review Find us on iTunes to *subscribe* and leave a 5-star review Find the 10 FACTOR on iTunes Find us on Stitcher to *subscribe* and leave a 5-star review Find the 10 FACTOR on Stitcher Submit questions or comments - we read and answer questions right on the show. tim@the10factor.com Connect with Tim: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/the10factor/ Instagram: @TimMeuchel Twitter: @TimMeuchel email: tim@the10factor.com Upcoming Episodes and Guests: Subscribe today so you don't miss any of our weekly episodes. 039 - Marcus Aurelius Anderson on the Gift of Adversity 040 - Dr. Jen Faber on The 90 Day Life: How to Live More in 3 Months Than You Have in 3 Years 041 - Roger Ramsukh on Moving Past Setbacks and Overcoming Self-Imposed Limits 042 - Cynthia Bazin on If You Want to be Extraordinary, You Must Stop Being Ordinary - - - UNTIL NEXT TIME: Tim Meuchel - The 10 Factor, signing off
Lisa Niver is a travel expert, writer, artist, entrepreneur, and on-camera host who has explored 96 countries. Niver has established a following through her written and video content, garnering over one million video views on YouTube, Amazon Fire Tv and Roku. Niver is the founder of a top 100 travel blog, We Said Go Travel, that reaches more than 200,000 annually and is in the top 1/8 of the top 1% of all sites in the United States. In her tri-annual international travel writing competitions, she has published nearly 2000 writers from 75 countries. She was invited to the United Nations as a Champions of Humanity ambassador, to the red carpet at the Oscars with United Airlines and to New Orleans for a project with American Express and Starwood Hotels. Her recent stories include Dutch designer villas for Luxury Magazine, interviewing Fabien Cousteau for Delta Sky, skiing with the blind for Sierra and scuba diving in the Solomon Islands for Smithsonian. She also contributes to USA Today, Wharton Business Magazine, the Jewish Journal and is verified on Twitter. Niver was a 2012 nominee for the Presidential Award for Excellence in Math and Science Teaching and a 2014 nominee for the Charles Bronfman Prize.
Sean Boone talks with underwater cinema pro, Matt Ferraro Sponsor: Backscatter Underwater Video & Photo Show Notes Matt Ferraro Cousteau Society 35mm Film Red Epic Dragon Jean-Michel Cousteau Ocean Adventures Fabien Cousteau’s Mission 31 Closed Circuit Rebreather U.S.S. Monitor Cordell Banks CSUMB director of photography Monterey Bay Area Brooks Institute Ernie Brooks Truth Aquatics Boats Ralph Clevenger Secrets of the Ocean Realm Howard & Michele Hall Bob Cranston Kirby Morgan Don Santee Keiko Deepwater Horizon oil spill underwater oil slick Aquarius Underwater Laboratory Saturation Diving Céline Cousteau Atlantic goliath grouper Eagle ray Moon Pool Amazon River Basin Return to the Amazon Dragas Gold Dredging Boats Tribes on the Edge Should We Contact Uncontacted Peoples? Red Epic Dragon Carl Zeiss Zeiss 15mm f/2.8 ASPH Red DSMC NIKON MOUNT Thermodyne Cases 4K Red Digital Cinema Camera Company Bayer filter Image stabilization Image noise High frame rate Toaster Drives Mary Lynn Price Raw image format Color Balance Color temperature Why Isn't The Sky Purple? Tints and shades Metadata MP4 Middle Gray or 18% Gray Computer Color is Broken Bounce Card Video Lights Tungsten film CTO - Color Temperature Orange HMI Lights Cyan Light Module Lumens CRI - Color rendering index Arctic Chuck Davis Bowhead whale Medium format (film) Children of Men Zika virus Simone Melchior Cousteau Force Fins
Lisa Niver is a travel expert, writer, artist, entrepreneur, and on-camera host who has explored 96 countries. Niver has established a following through her written and video content, garnering over one million video views on YouTube, Amazon Fire Tv and Roku. Niver is the founder of a top 100 travel blog, We Said Go Travel, that reaches more than 200,000 annually and is in the top 1/8 of the top 1% of all sites in the United States. In her tri-annual international travel writing competitions, she has published nearly 2000 writers from 75 countries. She was invited to the United Nations as a Champions of Humanity ambassador, to the red carpet at the Oscars with United Airlines and to New Orleans for a project with American Express and Starwood Hotels. Her recent stories include Dutch designer villas for Luxury Magazine, interviewing Fabien Cousteau for Delta Sky, skiing with the blind for Sierra and scuba diving in the Solomon Islands for Smithsonian. She also contributes to USA Today, Wharton Business Magazine, the Jewish Journal and is verified on Twitter. Niver was a 2012 nominee for the Presidential Award for Excellence in Math and Science Teaching and a 2014 nominee for the Charles Bronfman Prize.
The name Cousteau has been synonymous with the dive industry since the early days and that name continues as the grandson of scuba pioneer, Jacques Cousteau continues to advocate for the Earth's oceans. From coral reef and sea turtle to mangrove restoration projects, join host Greg Martin for an in-depth talk with Fabien Cousteau.
Educate + Empower + Restore. It is a great honor to be joined by Fabien Cousteau to discuss the Ocean Learning Center (OLC) and the experience of living 31 Days underwater. Our dynamic conversation will provide unique insights and review amazing adventures of the Cousteau family. Following his grandfather's words, “People protect what they love, they love what they understand and they understand what they are taught.” – Jacques-Yves Cousteau, the mission of the OLC is to raise awareness, educate, and inform all citizens of the world of ways to protect and preserve the planet's waters and endangered marine habitats and marine life. Through knowledge and innovative technologies regarding ocean preservation, the team at OLC collaborate with partners to develop educational programs and activities in aquatic conservation, restoration, and marine projects dedicated to protecting the Earth's waters and its inhabitants for the future of our next generation.
Into the deep or over the Moon—which is more important, intriguing, and inspiring? Explore the merits of sea vs. space across a range of judging categories with aquanauts Fabien Cousteau and Liz Bentley Magee, and astronauts Mike Massimino and Don Pettit. Hosted by comedian and journalist Faith Salie. This event took place at the Museum on April 13, 2017. For a full transcript of this podcast, visit: http://www.amnh.org/explore/news-blogs/podcasts/science-throwdown-sea-vs.-space
Educate + Empower + Restore. It is a great honor to be joined by Fabien Cousteau to discuss the Ocean Learning Center (OLC) and the experience of living 31 Days underwater. Our dynamic conversation will provide unique insights and review amazing adventures of the Cousteau family. Following his grandfather's words, “People protect what they love, they love what they understand and they understand what they are taught.” – Jacques-Yves Cousteau, the mission of the OLC is to raise awareness, educate, and inform all citizens of the world of ways to protect and preserve the planet's waters and endangered marine habitats and marine life. Through knowledge and innovative technologies regarding ocean preservation, the team at OLC collaborate with partners to develop educational programs and activities in aquatic conservation, restoration, and marine projects dedicated to protecting the Earth's waters and its inhabitants for the future of our next generation.
Science & U! this month honors Earth Day by taking a look back at some past segments that open our eyes to the environment. From the pine beetles of New Jersey to talking whales with Fabien Cousteau this episode will share the wonders of our world.
In 1963, Jacques Cousteau lived for 30 days in an underwater laboratory positioned on the floor of the Red Sea, and set a world record in the process. This summer, his grandson Fabien Cousteau broke that record. Cousteau the younger lived for 31 days aboard the Aquarius, an underwater research laboratory nine miles off the coast of Florida. In a charming talk he brings his wondrous adventure to life.
En 1963, Jacques Cousteau a vécu pendant 30 jours dans un laboratoire sous-marin au fond de la Mer Rouge, établissant ainsi un record mondial. Cet été, son petit-fils Fabien Cousteau a battu ce record. Il a vécu 31 jours à bord de l'Aquarius, un laboratoire de recherche sous-marin à 14 kilomètres des côtes de la Floride. Avec cette charmante conférence, il rend cette merveilleuse aventure vivante.
1963 lebte Jacques Cousteau 30 Tage lang in einem Unterseelabor am Boden des Roten Meeres und stellte dabei einen Weltrekord auf. Diesen Sommer hat sein Enkel, Fabien Cousteau, diesen Rekord gebrochen. Der jüngere Cousteau lebte 31 Tage lang im Aquarius, einem Forschungslabor, das 14,5 km vor der Küste von Florida liegt. In diesem charmanten Vortrag erweckt er sein wundersames Abenteuer zum Leben.
En 1963, Jacques Cousteau vivió durante 30 días en un laboratorio submarino ubicado en el fondo del Mar Rojo, y estableció un récord mundial. Este verano, su nieto Fabien Cousteau rompió ese récord. El más joven de los Cousteau vivió durante 31 días a bordo del Aquarius, un laboratorio de investigación submarina nueve millas mar adentro de la costa de la Florida. En una charla encantadora da vida a su maravillosa aventura.
Em 1963, Jacques Cousteau viveu durante trinta dias num laboratório subaquático instalado no leito do Mar Vermelho, e estabeleceu um recorde no processo. No último verão, seu neto Fabien Cousteau quebrou esse recorde. Cousteau, o neto, ficou durante trinta e um dias a bordo do Aquarius, um laboratório de pesquisa subaquático a 14,5 quilômetros da costa da Flórida. Numa palestra encantadora, ele dá vida à sua maravilhosa aventura.
The Meaning of Wilderness (starts 4:30): Fifty years ago last week, President Lyndon Johnson signed into law the Wilderness Act. It was then, and remains today, one of the most significant pieces of environmental legislation. It has protected millions of acres of land. And it established a legal definition of wilderness: “an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain.” Today, many are questioning what conversation should look like hardly a square inch of land around the world is truly "untrammeled." Co-host Susan Moran discusses wilderness then and now with Dr. M. Sanjayan, a senior scientist at Conservation International. He was a correspondent on the Showtime series on climate change, called Years of Living Dangerously. His next TV series, which will air next February, is called Earth -- A New Wild. Dr. Sanjayan will speak this Friday at 4 pm MT at Americas Latino Eco Festival. (www.americaslatinoecofestival.org) Living Underwater (starts 13:50): This segment continues our series, “The Ocean is Us,” exploring how we all, even in land-locked Colorado, are connected to the ocean, and what’s at stake. Co-host Susan Moran interviews Fabien Cousteau, grandson of Jacques-Yves Cousteau, the late oceanographic explorer who opened a window into the ocean for millions of people worldwide in the 1960s through his revolutionary scuba diving and underwater-living adventures. Fabien, an aquanaut, oceanographic explorer, and documentary filmmaker, discusses Mission 31, his recent 31-day underwater-living experiment (one day longer than Jacques-Yves' expedition a half century ago). All features in the "The Ocean Is Us" series can be found here. Also, check out KGNU’s year-long series on Colorado water issues. It’s called Connecting the Drops. It’s at kgnu.org and yourwatercolorado.org. To learn more or become active in preserving our watershed and the oceans, go to Colorado Ocean Coalition. Executive Producer: Joel Parker Producer: Ted Burnham Co-hosts: Susan Moran, Ted Burnham Engineer: Ted Burnham Additional Contributions: Jane Palmer, Beth Bennett Listen to the show:
Aquariumania - Tropical Fish as Pets - Pets & Animals on Pet Life Radio (PetLifeRadio.com)
Many consider our planet’s oceans too vast to be in trouble. But numerous scientific studies are proving that water quality and the lives of many marine - and terrestrial species, including ourselves, are at risk from mankind’s waste and climatic influences. My guest today, Fabien Cousteau, grandson of aquatic pioneer Jacques Cousteau, is himself an ocean explorer, film-maker, renaissance man, and even an optimist. Join us, as Fabien describes life as a Cousteau, his hopes and efforts to jump start ecological renewal through the "Plant A Fish" program, and how, ultimately, we are the solution to this sea of problems. Questions or Comments? Send them to: DrRoy@petliferadio.com. More details on this episode MP3 Podcast - A Sea of Problems and Solutions: Fabien Cousteau Discusses Ecological Restoration and his Plant a Fish Programs with Dr. Roy Yanong var ACE_AR = {Site: '845738', Size: '468060'};
How can we strike a balance between environmental sustainability and economic realities? In this university podcast, aquatic filmmaker and oceanographic explorer Fabien Cousteau discusses the problem of the failing health of our planet as it relates to climate change, over-consumption of natural resources, and pollution. He offers glimpses of a public policy platform grounded by his strong belief that environmental discipline can be the basis for innovative solutions that strike a balance between regional and global environmental problems and the realities of market economies. Cousteau spoke at the USRio+2.0 Conference, hosted by the Stanford Graduate School of Business. https://ssir.org/podcasts/entry/environmental_sustainability_economic_realities
Conversamos con Fabien Cousteau, cineasta y explorador de océanos, que ha venido a El Salvador gracias a “Vivazul”. Disfruta los misterios y nuestro país le parece muy interesante. Desea filmar la interacción de las personas con las tortugas.
Fabien Cousteau grew up on the salt-stained decks of his famous Grandfather’s ships. He was destined to follow in the family footsteps of exploring and tirelessly working to protect our planet’s immense and endangered marine habitats. Diving since age four, Fabien was irrevocably imprinted with an unwavering appreciation for the wonder, beauty, and importance of our aquatic ecosystems to sustaining life on this big blue planet of ours.
Erika Bergman is a submarine pilot, engineer, and a National Geographic Explorer. We talked with her back in episode 427 about taking Sir Richard Branson and Fabien Cousteau (grandson of famed ocean explorer Jacques Cousteau) on a submarine adventure into the depth of Belize's Great Blue Hole. The mission was successfully completed back in December and we're having her recount the adventure today! In 2013 she received a National Geographic Explorers grant for her "Classrooms Under the Sea" expedition which live-streamed submarine expeditions to classrooms. She's a superb storyteller with many interesting tales and accomplishments to share! She is also the Founder of GEECs - Global Engineering & Exploration Counselors; providing a network of thrilling engineering camps to girls around the world. aquaticasubmarines.com Instagram @aquaticasubs @theerikabergman Save 20% off the best freeze-dried meals you’ll ever eat with Peak Refuel. Use the code ASP20 at checkout by visiting peakrefuel.com @peakrefuel If you're in need of some personalized advice before buying your gear, go to backpacktribe.com. You're not only able to purchase the gear you need on their website but talk with someone with the experience and know how. They also offer gear bundles and free shipping. @backpacktribal Support the Adventure Sports Podcast by giving as low as $1/month to our efforts to produce this show athttps://www.patreon.com/AdventureSportsPodcast Call and leave us a voicemail at 812-MAIL-POD or 812-624-5763 or send an email to info@adventuresportspodcast.com
Erika Bergman is a submarine pilot, engineer, and a National Geographic Explorer who will be taking Sir Richard Branson and Fabien Cousteau (grandson of famed ocean explorer Jacques Cousteau) on a submarine adventure into the depth of Belize's Great Blue Hole. In 2013 she received a National Geographic Explorers grant for her "Classrooms Under the Sea" expedition which live-streamed submarine expeditions to classrooms. She's a superb storyteller with many interesting tales and accomplishments to share! She is also the Founder of GEECs - Global Engineering & Exploration Counselors; providing a network of thrilling engineering camps to girls around the world. https://www.thegeecs.com/ https://twitter.com/erika_bergman?lang=en