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O NJ Notícias tem sua essência baseada no rádio jornal, agora com notas, duas reportagens e uma entrevista. Neste episódio, vamos falar sobre a passagem do projeto “Arte de Inovar com Maratona de Inovação” em Bauru e do fechamento da unidade da Haribo na cidade. Também conversamos com Paulo Ricardo e Vinicius Lozano, estudantes da Unesp em Bauru, sobre as dificuldades de concilar os estudos com o trabalho.O podcast foi produzido por estudantes da Unesp de Bauru e esta edição conta com diversas fontes que contribuíram para o enriquecimento das reportagens e da experiência do ouvinte.Pautas, Reportagens e Locução por Alice Rodrigues, Analice Cruz, Beatriz Soares, Brida Souza, Livia Ghirardello, Mariana Bezerra e Maysa Cassu Notas por Alice Rodrigues e Beatriz SoaresEntrevista por Brida SouzaEdição de som por João Pedro Coelho e Yohana SorianoRoteiro geral por Luísa MachadoProdução por Luísa Machado Edição Geral por Ana Helena Masson Apresentação por Luísa Machado
We caught up with Lily Allen who is playing the 3arena 30th of June and 1st July! Jim-Jim found out somehthing mad about haribo And we'd an FM104s Ins2Grand WINNER!!! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Prenup discussion on the third date? One lawyer says yes sir, we're concerned about ingredients in what we eat apparently, Bumble is letting the pervs loose and Haribo is getting into the Patriotic spirit!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
https://svensagt.blogspot.com/2026/05/der-gummibarchen-lader-wie-zerobrain.html
Bahlsen, Douglas oder Haribo. Romane über die Familien hinter bekannten Marken boomen. Und obwohl viele Unternehmen von Männern geführt wurden, konzentrieren sich die Bücher fast immer auf Frauenfiguren. Das ist aber nur eine Besonderheit des Trends. Schniederjann, Niels www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Lesart
Bahlsen, Douglas oder Haribo. Romane über die Familien hinter bekannten Marken boomen. Und obwohl viele Unternehmen von Männern geführt wurden, konzentrieren sich die Bücher fast immer auf Frauenfiguren. Das ist aber nur eine Besonderheit des Trends. Schniederjann, Niels www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Lesart
Die Italo-Schlagersänger sprechen mit Arnd Zeigler u.a. über ihre Lieblingsvereine, Arenafeelings, die italienische Fankultur und persönliche Zukunftswünsche. Außerdem geht es um berühmte Fußballer und Schlagergrößen sowie die besonderen Gemeinsamkeiten von Fußball und Musik. Von Arnd Zeigler.
Lesart - das Literaturmagazin (ganze Sendung) - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Bahlsen, Douglas oder Haribo. Romane über die Familien hinter bekannten Marken boomen. Und obwohl viele Unternehmen von Männern geführt wurden, konzentrieren sich die Bücher fast immer auf Frauenfiguren. Das ist aber nur eine Besonderheit des Trends. Schniederjann, Niels www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Lesart
We talk with Wild Things founder Fliss Newland about going from Mondelez to building an organic, plant-based gummy brand that targets families without losing the fun of sweets. She breaks down the practical steps behind the leap, from finding the right opportunity to nailing brand positioning, packaging, and early retail wins. Childhood hustle stories and the influence of self-employed parents Learning FMCG fundamentals at Mondelez, from perfect store to pricing and promotions Moving to Asia to stretch skills and seek less mature markets Taking on an existing vegan sweets business and spotting the product advantage “manifesting” as networking, asking for help, and saying ambitions out loud Qualitative consumer research with parents, including panels and real-world routines Positioning sweets as balance and permissibility rather than guilt and restriction Investing in distinctive branding to win at the shelf Getting first sales via Lunch! trade show, distributors, independents, and sampling Winning Ocado by pitching a tight proposition and staying focused on the target shopper Founder highs and lows, sleep, decision-making speed, and building a team culture please like and subscribe and write a review would really appreciate it. if you want to know more about building a food business head to wwwjgreenwood.co.ukSupport the show
Japan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo, Japan
"The amount of time you need to spend listening in Japan is very high." "You have to turn up your EQ sensitivity or your EQ radar very, very high." "No matter what, love it." "Feedback should be ninety percent positive." "Leadership is achieving the organisation's goal by maximising the potential of your team." Paul Kraft is the Country Manager for Haribo in Japan and a seasoned food and beverage executive whose career has crossed global brands, entrepreneurial ventures, and distributor-led market development. His relationship with Japan began when he first visited in 1991 on a school trip after studying finance and economics, and he later returned to Osaka to teach English before building his early career in the United States as a product and brand manager in the frozen food sector. Starbucks then recruited him to establish its consumer packaged goods office in Tokyo, where his team expanded the brand beyond coffee shops into convenience store cup coffee, canned coffee, and dry coffee formats. He later launched Honey Baked Ham in Japan through an omnichannel strategy covering food service, retail, and online sales, before joining Nespresso to lead the business-to-business group serving hotels, restaurants, and off-premise clients. At Haribo, Kraft became the company's first person on the ground in Japan, guiding the distributor, shaping strategy, and acting as the bridge between the Japanese market and the global organisation. His career arc reflects adaptability in Japan: learning when to push, when to listen, when to use nemawashi, how to reduce uncertainty, and how to lead through consensus, precedent, relationship depth, and trust. Paul Kraft's leadership journey in Japan is a practical study in how global executives must adapt ambition, speed, and commercial logic to a business culture that places deep value on patience, consensus, trust, and emotional intelligence. His connection with Japan began in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when Japanese business influence was highly visible internationally. Toyota, Japanese management methods, and major Japanese investments overseas created a sense that understanding Japan was essential for future business leaders. Kraft studied finance and economics, visited Japan for the first time in 1991, and fell in love with the country. After graduating, he returned to Osaka to teach English before moving back to the United States and entering the food business. His early food career gave him broad commercial exposure. He worked as a product and brand manager for a privately held frozen food company, handling brands across categories such as ice cream, pizza, and frozen egg rolls. He also gained experience in research, brand management, and mergers and acquisitions. The turning point came when Starbucks recruited him to return to Japan and set up a consumer packaged goods office in Tokyo. Within three months, he sold his cars, sold his house, gave away his tools, and moved to Japan. It was a decisive commitment to the market. At Starbucks, Kraft's team was responsible for everything outside the coffee shops, including convenience store cup coffee, canned coffee, different drinks, and packaged coffee products. Japan's vast convenience store network meant the business could scale dramatically. At one point, he believed Starbucks may have been selling more cups of coffee outside the stores than inside them. Yet the opportunity came with culture shock. Kraft encountered long, meandering meetings with Japanese partners where the purpose was not necessarily to decide, but to discuss. Coming from a Western business environment that valued agendas, pre-reads, data, speed, and explicit outcomes, he found this difficult. Partners might resist data, avoid firm conclusions, or reject new ideas because they had no precedent. This introduced one of Kraft's central leadership lessons: frustration management is a business skill in Japan. He admits that in his early years he sometimes relied too much on visible frustration or forceful leadership. He learned that anger in Japan is not usually interpreted as strength. It is often seen as weak self-control, poor maturity, low self-awareness, and a failure to read the group. In a culture shaped by uncertainty avoidance and consensus, the leader who becomes known as a hothead loses influence. Kraft's next major chapter, Honey Baked Ham, tested his entrepreneurial instincts. He cold-called the CEO of the American family-owned chain and convinced the company to support a Japan launch. The concept was unfamiliar in a market where honey-baked ham did not have obvious precedent. Kraft built an omnichannel model covering food service, a physical store, and online sales. He worked with local financial backers, freelancers, part-time staff, and a very lean team. The leadership challenge was not just selling a product, but selling belief. To attract employees and customers, he had to tell the story of the brand, offer the product directly, and reduce the perceived risk of joining or buying into something new. In Japan, he found that new ideas often need a "Japanese stamp of approval". For Honey Baked Ham, that stamp came from the New Otani Hotel. Once the product was accepted by a respected, traditional, luxury Japanese hotel, the market could interpret it differently. It was no longer merely a foreign idea. It had local legitimacy. This is decision intelligence in a Japanese setting: understanding that data alone is not enough if social proof, trust signals, respected reference points, and emotional confidence are missing. At Nespresso, Kraft moved from entrepreneurial uncertainty into a highly structured global organisation. Nespresso, as part of Nestlé, had strong processes, operational discipline, monthly reviews, and clear accountability systems. Kraft led the business-to-business group, serving hotels, restaurants, and off-premise clients. There, he focused on weekly one-on-ones, feedback, and structure. He maintained regular conversations with direct reports, taking notes, sharing updates, listening to their updates, and discussing future deliverables. He also saw the value of monthly operational reviews where commitments were visible and specific: who would do what by when. Red, yellow, and green status tracking created accountability, but it also required leaders to prevent people from setting themselves up to fail. At Haribo, Kraft now leads largely through influence. Haribo had existed in Japan for decades through distributors, but Kraft became the first person representing the company directly on the ground. His role is to guide the distributor, shape strategy, interpret the Japanese market for the global organisation, and influence outcomes without necessarily controlling every lever. This is leadership through relationship rather than hierarchy. For Kraft, the answer lies in patience, small-group influence, and nemawashi. Large meetings with many distributor representatives are rarely where minds are changed. The real work happens in smaller conversations, offline follow-ups, and repeated explanations of why something matters. Across the interview, Kraft's leadership philosophy is consistent. He advocates weekly one-on-ones, positive feedback, careful listening, written notes, high EQ, and learning Japanese. He believes leaders should look for people doing things right and tell them specifically. He also believes leaders should encourage initiative, especially in Japan, where proposing an idea can itself be a courageous act. Ultimately, Kraft defines leadership as achieving the organisation's goal by maximising the potential of the team. In Japan, that means leading with EQ rather than ego, using structure without crushing people, building consensus without losing accountability, and understanding that influence is earned through patience, presence, and trust. Q&A Summary What makes leadership in Japan unique? Leadership in Japan is unique because authority alone is rarely enough to move people, partners, or organisations. Kraft's experience shows that Japan places heavy emphasis on consensus, precedent, trust, and the emotional readiness of the group. A meeting may not be designed to make a decision in the Western sense. It may be designed to exchange views, test reactions, identify resistance, and prepare the ground for a later decision. This can frustrate executives who arrive expecting agendas, data, pre-reads, and immediate outcomes. However, in Japan, the visible meeting is often only one part of the decision-making process. The real work may occur before and after the formal meeting. This is where nemawashi becomes essential. Rather than forcing a decision in front of a large group, effective leaders work privately with stakeholders, listen to their concerns, explain the reason behind the proposal, and create alignment before asking for visible agreement. In some organisations, this may connect to formal mechanisms such as ringi-sho, where written proposals circulate for approval. Even when ringi-sho is not used formally, the underlying cultural logic remains: people want to avoid surprises, protect relationships, and reduce uncertainty before committing. Why do global executives struggle? Global executives struggle in Japan when they assume that leadership methods which worked elsewhere will automatically work here. Kraft describes coming from a Western environment where meetings were purposeful, decisions were expected, and data played a central role. In Japan, he encountered long discussions without agendas, partners who were not prepared to discuss data, and resistance to ideas because they had never been done before. For a Western leader, this can look inefficient or evasive. For Japanese counterparts, it may reflect caution, uncertainty avoidance, and the desire to avoid exposing the group to visible failure. Another reason global executives struggle is emotional pacing. Kraft admits that his own frustration management was a multi-year learning process. Early in his Japan career, he sometimes believed that a leader had to pound the table, push harder, or force things to happen. Over time, he realised that visible anger usually weakens credibility in Japan. It may be interpreted as poor self-control, low maturity, insufficient self-awareness, or an inability to operate inside the group. Leaders who become known as hotheads lose influence. Is Japan truly risk-averse? Kraft's experience suggests that Japan is not simply risk-averse; it is highly sensitive to uncertainty, precedent, and failure visibility. People may resist new ideas not because they dislike innovation, but because they cannot forecast the outcome, cannot point to a precedent, or cannot see how failure will be managed. His Starbucks orange mocha example illustrates this clearly. Even with data and enthusiasm, Japanese counterparts resisted because they could not forecast something that had never been done before. The absence of precedent made the idea difficult to accept. At Honey Baked Ham, Kraft had to reduce uncertainty on multiple fronts. He needed employees to believe in a small start-up-like venture, customers to accept an unfamiliar product, and business partners to see legitimacy in the concept. He did this through storytelling, product sampling, financial backing, and visible local validation. The New Otani Hotel became a crucial Japanese stamp of approval. Once a respected Japanese institution accepted the product, the perceived risk fell. This is a useful lesson for leaders: in Japan, risk is often managed through social proof, credibility markers, and trusted reference points. Decision intelligence in Japan requires more than analysis. It requires understanding how people feel safe enough to act. What leadership style actually works? The leadership style that works in Japan is patient, structured, emotionally intelligent, and specific. Kraft repeatedly returns to the importance of weekly one-on-ones. He used them not as casual check-ins, but as disciplined leadership routines. He wrote down the person's name, the date, his update, their update, the future focus, and the deliverables. Over time, this built trust and created a rhythm of communication. In Japan, where employees may hesitate to speak up in larger forums, one-on-ones provide a safer space for concerns, ideas, and coaching. Kraft also emphasises feedback, especially positive feedback. He argues that feedback should be ninety percent positive. This does not mean avoiding problems. It means noticing specific behaviours that should continue and reinforcing them. At Nespresso, Kraft also saw the value of structured accountability. Monthly operational reviews asked who would do what by when, using red-yellow-green status tracking. This helped cut through ambiguity and group responsibility. The most effective style is not soft consensus or hard command. It is a combination of empathy, structure, clarity, and support. How can technology help? Technology can help leadership in Japan when it reduces uncertainty, improves shared understanding, and supports better decision-making. Kraft's career points repeatedly to the importance of data, forecasting, operational reviews, and structured follow-up. At Starbucks, he wanted data-driven conversations with partners. At Nespresso, process and dashboards made accountability visible. At Haribo, he works in a market where convenience stores are highly sophisticated and retail execution depends on understanding channels, forecasts, and consumer behaviour. Modern tools such as retail analytics, AI-supported forecasting, digital twins, scenario planning dashboards, and decision intelligence platforms can be powerful in Japan because they allow teams to test ideas before committing. In a high-consensus culture, technology can create a shared factual base. It can help people compare options, visualise consequences, and reduce the fear of the unknown. Digital twins, for example, can allow leaders to model supply chain, distribution, retail placement, or product launch scenarios without requiring immediate real-world commitment. This can lower emotional resistance and make decisions feel safer. However, technology cannot replace trust. In Japan, data may be necessary, but it is rarely sufficient. Leaders must still explain the why, conduct nemawashi, listen to objections, and create confidence among stakeholders. Does language proficiency matter? Language proficiency matters in Japan because it signals respect, commitment, and seriousness. Kraft says leaders should try to learn Japanese, even if they do not become fluent. Fluency helps a leader catch nuance, understand emotional tone, and communicate directly with employees, partners, and distributors. It also helps reduce the distance that can exist between a foreign executive and a Japanese team. In a market where trust is built slowly, the effort to learn the language can itself become a stamp of approval. That said, Kraft does not suggest that language ability alone makes someone an effective leader. A fluent but impatient leader can still fail. A non-fluent but humble, consistent, and respectful leader can still build trust. The key is effort. Trying to learn Japanese shows that the executive is not merely passing through. It shows they are willing to adapt to the local context, not simply demand that the local context adapt to them. What's the ultimate leadership lesson? The ultimate leadership lesson from Kraft's experience is that leaders in Japan must maximise people's potential by building trust, reducing uncertainty, and communicating with discipline. His definition is clear: leadership is achieving the organisation's goal by maximising the potential of the team. That requires more than setting targets. It requires creating the conditions in which people can contribute, speak up, try ideas, receive feedback, and accept accountability without fear of humiliation. Kraft's career shows that Japan rewards leaders who can operate as bridges. At Starbucks, he bridged global brand ambition and Japanese retail realities. At Honey Baked Ham, he bridged an unfamiliar American food concept and Japanese legitimacy signals. At Nespresso, he bridged global process discipline and local team development. At Haribo, he bridges headquarters, distributor partners, retailers, and the Japanese market. The best leaders in Japan do not abandon ambition. They adapt how ambition is communicated and implemented. They listen longer, give more positive feedback, use smaller meetings, manage their frustration, explain the why, and build consensus before demanding action. Author Credentials Dr. Greg Story, Ph.D. in Japanese Decision-Making, is President of Dale Carnegie Tokyo Training and Adjunct Professor at Griffith University. He is a two-time winner of the Dale Carnegie "One Carnegie Award" (2018, 2021) and recipient of the Griffith University Business School Outstanding Alumnus Award (2012). As a Dale Carnegie Master Trainer, Greg is certified to deliver globally across all leadership, communication, sales, and presentation programs, including Leadership Training for Results. He has written several books, including three best-sellers — Japan Business Mastery, Japan Sales Mastery, and Japan Presentations Mastery — along with Japan Leadership Mastery and How to Stop Wasting Money on Training. His works have also been translated into Japanese, including Za Eigyō (ザ営業), Purezen no Tatsujin (プレゼンの達人), Torēningu de Okane o Muda ni Suru no wa Yamemashō (トレーニングでお金を無駄にするのはやめましょう), and Gendaiban "Hito o Ugokasu" Rīdā (現代版「人を動かす」リーダー). In addition to his books, Greg publishes daily blogs on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter, offering practical insights on leadership, communication, and Japanese business culture. He is also the host of six weekly podcasts, including The Leadership Japan Series, The Sales Japan Series, The Presentations Japan Series, Japan Business Mastery, and Japan's Top Business Interviews. On YouTube, he produces three weekly shows — The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show, Japan Business Mastery, and Japan's Top Business Interviews — which have become leading resources for executives seeking strategies for success in Japan.
Peter and Eden dive into the first four issues of Larry Hama's classic G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero comics — a Kickstarter Peter may have regretted until roughly issue three, when a self-reassembling mech changed his mind. Before getting to Cobra, they cover Eden's return to Final Fantasy XIV and a crash course in Riichi Mahjong, Peter's take on Dungeon Crawler Carl Book 7 (enthusiastically defended as entertainment, explicitly not art), the emotional weight of the new At the Gates album The Ghost of a Future Dead, and a handful of other metal releases. The G.I. Joe discussion turns into a genuinely good riff on comics history, the widescreen movement, and what it feels like to read a 1982 military action comic with 2025 eyes.SHOW NOTESEden returns to Final Fantasy XIV: The new expansion Everkold was announced and Eden is skeptical of the premise. They made a new character on a new data center with a self-imposed gimmick — only picking classes that use magic, which leads to some fun justifications for Dark Knight and Reaper.Riichi Mahjong crash course: Eden attended a learn-to-play Mahjong event at a local board game lounge and has been practicing at the Gold Saucer in FFXIV. The tiles are described as resembling Haribo frogs — thick, satisfying, extremely edible-looking.Eden's reading: Clematis and Wisteria series: A contemporary fantasy series set in a majocracy where healers are second-class citizens bonded to mages. Features two prickly, genuinely unlikable protagonists in a slow-burn enemies-to-lovers arc. Eden is several books in and very much into it.Dungeon Crawler Carl Book 7: Peter finished it and reaffirmed his position that it is not art — it is McDonald's. A fun, genre-appropriate palate cleanser, nothing more. This generated at least one spirited reply from a listener on social media that Peter declined to further engage with.Dresden Files Book 18 (Cold Days): Peter is halfway through and pleasantly surprised by how contemplative and low-action it is so far — Harry processing trauma rather than punching things. He expects crazy stuff by the end.Metal roundup: Peter covers several recent releases — Grief Collector's The Death of All Dreams (classic doom), A Dream of Poe's Katabasis: A Marriage Among Ashes (gothic/symphonic doom from Portugal, came with a personal thank-you email from the artist), Avertat's Dead End Life (death-doom), and Sepultura's swan-song EP The Cloud of Unknowing. Peter delivers a hot take defending post-Max Sepultura and does not mince words about the Cavalera brothers.At the Gates — The Ghost of a Future Dead: The most affecting music note of the episode. Lead vocalist Tomas Lindberg was diagnosed with adenoid cystic carcinoma, recorded demo vocals for the entire album in one day before surgery, and ultimately died from the disease. The band completed the album using those recordings. Peter calls it a real banger and a worthy send-off.G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero (Issues 1–4): The main topic. Both Peter and Eden started skeptical — Peter "made a hundreds of dollars mistake" on the Kickstarter — but came around by issue three when a self-rebuilding mech shows up. Eden provides a solid comics theory digression on the widescreen movement, Silver Age overexplaining, and where 1982 G.I. Joe sits in that history. Larry Hama's background (Asian American, invented characters alongside Hasbro, writing it into his 60s) gets discussed, as does the book's period-typical racism and sexism, Snake Eyes' ambiguous deal, and Cobra's complete lack of motivation.Free Comic Book Day plug: Eden reminds listeners that Free Comic Book Day is the following Saturday. The Dungeon Crawler Carl zero issue will be available. Eden also shouts out G.I. Joe: Silent Missions and a single issue written by friend-of-the-shop Phil Hester.
➡️ Abonniere den Kanal, um keine weiteren spannenden Interviews zu verpassen! Heute tauchen wir in die Welt von Marketing und Unternehmertum ein. Er gehört zu den Forbes 30 Under 30 – und das schafft man nicht mal eben so. Er spricht regelmäßig auf Bühnen wie TEDx und Online Marketing Rockstars und berät einige der größten Unternehmen weltweit. 2014 gründete er Pulse Advertising – mit der Mission, Werbung wieder meaningful zu machen. Heute ist daraus eine internationale Unternehmensgruppe entstanden. Marken wie BMW, MINI, Coca-Cola, Deutsche Bank, Giorgio Armani, HARIBO, Lamborghini und American Express vertrauen ihm. Und die Liste geht noch lange weiter… Wie tickt so ein Ausnahme-Unternehmer wirklich? Genau das finden wir heute gemeinsam heraus. Ich freue mich sehr, dass es klappt: Herzlich willkommen, Chris Kastenholz
Anmeldung zur Kassenzone Pre OMR-Party: https://www.kassenzone.de/party/ In dieser Update-Folge spricht Karo mit Philip Hitschler-Becker, CEO von Hitschies. Live auf der data:unplugged beleuchten die beiden die rasante Transformation des fast 100 Jahre alten Familienunternehmens zu einer viralen Social-Media-Marke. Wie behauptet sich Hitschies als der "kleinste, aber lauteste" Player im Süßwarenregal gegen Branchenriesen wie Haribo oder Katjes? Welche Strategie steckt hinter neuen Produktinnovationen, die virale Begehrlichkeiten im Supermarkt auslösen? Und wie gelingt es, eine treue Community mit über einer Million Followern auf Instagram, TikTok und LinkedIn aufzubauen und diese in den Mittelpunkt der Produktentwicklung zu stellen? Philip teilt außerdem seine Perspektive auf die Herausforderungen im D2C-E-Commerce bei niedrigpreisigen Artikeln, die internationale Expansion in 46 Länder und warum Hitschies aktuell intensiv in den Aufbau eines eigenen KI-Teams zur Automatisierung und Effizienzsteigerung investiert. Das Gespräch im Überblick: (1:54) Herausforderungen im E-Commerce (5:11) Neue Produkte und Innovationen (7:19) Die Bedeutung von Community (9:45) TikTok und Social Media Erfolg (12:09) Die Bedeutung von KI im Unternehmen (21:25) Die Vision der digitalen Candy-Brand Podcast-Host – Karo Junker de Neui: https://www.linkedin.com/in/karojunker https://etribes.de/ Newsletter: https://www.kassenzone.de/newsletter/ Community: https://kassenzone.de/discord Disclaimer: https://www.kassenzone.de/disclaimer/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/KassenzoneDe/ Blog: https://www.kassenzone.de/ Kassenzone” wird vermarktet von Podstars by OMR. Du möchtest in “Kassenzone” werben? Dann https://podstars.de/kontakt/?utm_source=podcast&utm_campaign=shownotes_kassenzone
(Rec: 1/10/24) Parenting fear, hotel breakfasts, abstinence, flat vs house, and catflap positioning. Join the Iron Filings Society: https://www.patreon.com/topflighttimemachine and on Apple Podcast Subscriptions. Get a 7-day full access free trial and pay for 10 months up front for the price of 12 if you like a bargain. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Leute, wir kommen heute zu einem meiner absoluten Lieblingsthemen. Denn wir sprechen in dieser Folge über Süßigkeiten. Und ja, wir sind noch immer ein Triathlonpodcast! Auch, wenn dieses Thema alle anderen Menschen interessieren dürften. Aber wir haben euch nach euren größten Problemen im Bereich Ernährung gefragt und rate mal, was mit am häufigsten genannt wurde? Genau! Das Problem mit den kleinen Veersuchungen Alltag, die hin und wieder auch mal zu einer größeren Eskalation werden können!Was wir euch zu dem Thema raten und was aus unserer Sicht der beste Umgang damit ist, hörst du in dieser Folge. Viel Spaß beim zuhören. ---Zum Mission Triathlon Racing Team
Welcome to our 100th short! We're way over 200 episodes now. So to thank y'all for sticking with us over four years, we've prepared this odd special. The Creeps were forced at fake knifepoint to try random candy that Britte bought from the wildly popular online candy shop, Poppin Candy. We tried the following heap of sugar, almost murdering Kelsey:Haribo Happy Ice Tea (Peach & Lemon Ice Tea Bottles, Germany)Fizzy Red Belt Rolls (sticky roll of chewy stuff, unknown possibly Spain)Jellyatrics Jelly Babies (Jelly candy, England)Fizzy Cherry Drops (fizz gummy, Belgium)Gummy Candy Corn (foam gummy, Vidal, Spain)Sour Peach & Cola Ovals (split flavor gummy, S-Märke, Sweden)Sour Squares (aerated gummy, New Zealand)Feijoa & Cream (cream gummy, New Zealand)Then, Kelsey brings you the greatest mermaid story ever. Erin Sutton was recently accused of threatening a sheriff deputy that responded to her alleged trespassing nude in a neighbor's pond because she wanted to "be a mermaid" -and who are we to judge. Maybe she is a mermaid?They also shout out their fan, tastes that are red, new stuff, Haribo hard chew, and Doctor Who music.
Text HOG-POD with your thoughts on this episode.In this exciting episode, we have the pleasure of chatting with the recently announced Bagger World Cup rider, Archie McDonald! As he gears up for his thrilling debut in the inaugural Harley-Davidson Bagger World Cup, Archie shares his journey to this incredible opportunity at just 19 years old, racing for Joe Rascal Racing in Australia. Join us as we dive into the events that paved the way for Archie's rise in the racing world, from his early inspirations to the challenges he faced along the way. Expect plenty of laughs and engaging banter as we discuss what it means to be a young rider in a competitive environment, especially with the clock striking 2 am UK time during our recording! Whether you're a racing enthusiast or just curious about what goes on behind the scenes in the world of motorcycle sports, this episode is packed with insights and inspiration.Chapters00:00 – Introductions02:50 – Archie McDonald Intro07:26 – First time on a Bagger 10:01 – Difference in the bikes13:52 – Bagger training 16:20 – Mental preparation18:16 – No motorcycle licence21:03 – Rider safety24:36 – World travel for the racing28:23 – World at his feet32:00 – Superstitions35:19 – Welcome to Joe Rascal Racing43:04 – Haribo on a bagger44:16 - Farewells
Haribo, c'est beau la vie, pour les grands et les petits. Efficace et pas chère, c'est la MAAF que j'préfère Bien sûr, la rime facilite la mémorisation. Une phrase rythmée est plus facile à retenir, à répéter et à transmettre. Notre cerveau est particulièrement sensible aux régularités sonores : elles demandent moins d'effort cognitif pour être traitées. Mais cet avantage mnésique n'est qu'une partie de l'explication.Les slogans rimés tirent surtout parti d'un biais cognitif bien documenté : l'effet de rime, aussi appelé rhyme-as-reason effect.Ce biais a été mis en évidence en 2000 par les psychologues Matthew McGlone et Jessica Tofighbakhsh, dans une étude devenue classique publiée dans la revue Psychological Science. Leur expérience est simple : ils présentent à des participants des affirmations exprimant la même idée, mais sous deux formes différentes. L'une rime, l'autre non.Résultat : les participants jugent systématiquement la version rimée plus vraie, plus convaincante et plus fiable, alors même que le sens est strictement identique.Pourquoi ? Parce que notre cerveau confond fluidité cognitive et validité. Une phrase qui rime est plus facile à traiter mentalement. Cette facilité est ressentie comme un signal positif : inconsciemment, nous interprétons ce confort cognitif comme un indice de vérité. Autrement dit, si une phrase « sonne juste », elle nous paraît… juste.Ce mécanisme est automatique et largement inconscient. Même lorsqu'on sait que la rime n'a aucune valeur logique, l'effet persiste. D'autres travaux ont confirmé ce biais dans des contextes variés : jugements moraux, messages de prévention, slogans politiques ou publicitaires.Les publicitaires exploitent donc un raccourci mental très puissant. Une phrase rimée donne l'impression d'être plus ancienne, plus partagée, presque proverbiale. Elle évoque la sagesse populaire, l'évidence collective. C'est exactement pour cette raison que de nombreux dictons traditionnels utilisent la rime : elle confère une autorité implicite.En résumé, les slogans publicitaires ne riment pas seulement pour être jolis ou mémorables. Ils utilisent une faille subtile de notre raisonnement : notre tendance à confondre forme agréable et fond crédible. Une démonstration élégante de la manière dont le cerveau peut être convaincu… sans jamais s'en rendre compte. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
On parle marques, ce matin, amis des mots, sur une suggestion de Phil, de Laval, qui m'écrit : "Bonjour madame, pourriez-vous faire une rubrique sur les noms d'entreprises ? Pour elles, le choix d'un nom est primordial !" Merci, Phil, voilà une super idée !Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Ever noticed how the moment you put down the wine glass, you suddenly find yourself at the bottom of a family-sized bag of Haribo? You aren't alone. In fact, for many of us, the "sugar monster" was waiting in the wings long before we poured our last drink.In this episode, we sit down with Vanessa Kredler, a Sydney-based psychotherapist and specialist in ultra-processed food addiction. Vanessa brings a lived experience in recovering from both food and alcohol addiction.We dive deep into why these two habits are so often "best friends" and how to navigate the "naughty food" phase of early sobriety without losing your mind.We explore:The Binge Trigger: Why Vanessa had to give up alcohol to finally heal her relationship with food.The AA Sugar Phenomenon: Why are there always so many sweets at recovery meetings? We look at the biological link between the bottle and the biscuit tin.The Great Food Addiction Challenge: You can choose to never touch alcohol again, but you have to eat. How do you manage an addiction to something you need for survival?How Worried Should You Be?: Should you be concerned about your skyrocketing sugar intake in early sobriety, or is it okay to "treat yourself" while you find your feet?Whether you're "sober curious" or a few years in and wondering why you're suddenly obsessed with ice cream, Vanessa offers incredible insight into how to find balance and understand the "why" behind your cravings.
Welcome to 2026 — where resolutions are loud, motivation lasts 24 hours, and reality hits before the cheese Maggi finishes boiling.In this episode of Moment of Silence Podcast, we give you a first look at the NEW MOS Studio and ask the uncomfortable question: are we actually better versions of ourselves this year, or just rebranded? We talk about New Year resolutions that didn't even survive Jan 1, healthy eating plans sabotaged by chips, food delivery apps we swore we'd boycott (but didn't), and the chaos of trying to “do better” without changing habits. Things escalate quickly — from an unexpected encounter with Radhika Merchant, to entering the kitchen with good intentions and exiting with near-death trauma. We tick off bucket-list moments, unpack the fear and freedom of solo travel, and relive losing money in euros on our Amsterdam trip (which hurt more than expected). From Indian music feeling oddly comforting abroad, to nightfall meaning two very different things (wink wink), to questionable massage parlours that felt less relaxing and more life-threatening. We also dive into red-alert areas, suggesting a paywall option, and moments that made us question why Shankar Mahadevan sings every song like it's cardio. Add movie reviews- Dhurandar, personal losses, cultural shocks and vision boards for 2026.Basically: new year, new studio, same us — just louder, wiser (for sure), and still figuring it out.A big thank you to Orange Tree for sponsoring the lovely, comfortable furniture that elevates the space. https://www.instagram.com/orangetreehomes?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igsh=ZDNlZDc0MzIxNw==Chaptering:00:00 – MOS enters 2026 with opinions00:37 – Welcome to the MOS Studio era01:49 – New Year resolutions02:34 – Casual day, casually met Radhika Merchant 06:09 – Almost died… in our own kitchen08:07 – We're NOT boycotting food delivery, relax09:29 – Amsterdam chaos + solo trip thoughts10:49 – Nightfall means VERY different things14:19 – Foot massage vs body massage: Amsterdam edition17:01 – The dark side of a Haribo cookie20:45 – Wallet pinched, trip traumatised23:11 – Our Amsterdam itinerary (learn from our mistakes)25:26 – Found the saddest place on earth28:06 – Bhajans & aarti… but make it modern30:47 – Dhurandhar review (honest & unhinged)37:37 – Book club is officially happening 38:15 – Vision boards for 2026 (scam or slay?)43:49 – Unsolicited advice for the mommies47:27 – AI in 2026: helpful or terrifying?Also don't forget to visit our website- https://mos-pod.com/Brutally Honest Creators - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHkcqImp8gcbZHzn1secwSYYKG8dds437Comedians Unfiltered- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHkcqImp8gcabWOmtiYQUUXGU4ptrq9HBFollow MoS on Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/momentofsil...Credits:Naina Bhan - Co-host and certified overthinkerhttps://www.instagram.com/nainabee?ig...Sakshi Shivdasani - Co-host, balancing out Naina's overthinking with a healthy dose of not thinkinghttps://www.instagram.com/sakshishivd...Senior Producer- Amruta P. www.linkedin.com/in/amruta-bandivdekar-01879925Produced by Handmade - Our personal cheering squad https://www.instagram.com/thehandmade...Creative direction by Tinkre, Keeper of MoS' signature “Pookie” energy Natascha Mehrahttps://www.instagram.com/tinkre.in/?hl=enhttps://www.instagram.com/natascha.zip/?hl=en Researched by our very own curiosity engineer - Aashna Sharma https://www.linkedin.com/in/aashna-sharma-913146179Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed on this podcast are for entertaining purposes only and do not necessarily reflect those of the hosts, the production team, or affiliated brand. We don't claim to be experts- just two people with Wi-fi and feelings. While we encourage open dialogue, we do not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information shared. Listener discretion is advised — especially if you're allergic to strong opinions.
This week in the security news: Supply chain attacks and XSS PS5 leaked keys Claude tips for security pros No Flipper Zeros allowed, or Raspberry PIs for that matter Kimwolf and your local network Linux is good now Removing unremovable apps without root Detecting lag catches infiltrators Defending your KVM Fixing some of the oldest code Deleting websites live on stage in costume It was a honeypot FCC is letting telecoms off easy Don't buy a Haribo power bank Ransomeware scum Fortinet vulns CISA warns about NVRs Patching MongoDB Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-908
This week in the security news: Supply chain attacks and XSS PS5 leaked keys Claude tips for security pros No Flipper Zeros allowed, or Raspberry PIs for that matter Kimwolf and your local network Linux is good now Removing unremovable apps without root Detecting lag catches infiltrators Defending your KVM Fixing some of the oldest code Deleting websites live on stage in costume It was a honeypot FCC is letting telecoms off easy Don't buy a Haribo power bank Ransomeware scum Fortinet vulns CISA warns about NVRs Patching MongoDB Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-908
This week in the security news: Supply chain attacks and XSS PS5 leaked keys Claude tips for security pros No Flipper Zeros allowed, or Raspberry PIs for that matter Kimwolf and your local network Linux is good now Removing unremovable apps without root Detecting lag catches infiltrators Defending your KVM Fixing some of the oldest code Deleting websites live on stage in costume It was a honeypot FCC is letting telecoms off easy Don't buy a Haribo power bank Ransomeware scum Fortinet vulns CISA warns about NVRs Patching MongoDB Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-908
This week in the security news: Supply chain attacks and XSS PS5 leaked keys Claude tips for security pros No Flipper Zeros allowed, or Raspberry PIs for that matter Kimwolf and your local network Linux is good now Removing unremovable apps without root Detecting lag catches infiltrators Defending your KVM Fixing some of the oldest code Deleting websites live on stage in costume It was a honeypot FCC is letting telecoms off easy Don't buy a Haribo power bank Ransomeware scum Fortinet vulns CISA warns about NVRs Patching MongoDB Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-908
This week, James and Will are joined by Dr Hutch, the legendary British time-trial rider (second only to Beryl Burton in national wins) turned Cambridge-educated doctor turned journalist. Dr Hutch is a longstanding columnist in Cycling Weekly (other cycling magazines are available, see our link to Cyclist below y'know), commentator, pundit, voice of cycling authority and author of several books including the critically acclaimed The Hour, a warts-and-all account of his ill-fated attempt at the Hour record, Faster: The obsession, science and luck behind the world's fastest cyclists, and most recently, Further: Seeking the distant limits of cycling endurance (Atlantic).In this episode, Dr Hutch explains the moment he 'cried for seven hours on a bike', how Haribo jelly-snakes saved his bacon, the mental madness and fortitude of endurance racing from national 24hr TTs to the Transcon, what makes a endurance specialist special, and why failing to take the Hour was exactly what it says: a failure, but one that rewarded him with lifelong lessons that have shaped his cycling ever since.The interview begins at 9.26This episode is brought to you by the Hammerhead Karoo GPS bike computer. Visit hammerhead.io and use the code CYCLIST to get a free HR strap with every purchase (just be sure to add the strap to your cart then apply the code at checkout).------------------This episode is also brought to you by Help for Heroes Big Battlefield Bike Ride, am epic, four day, 250-mile trip around Belgium and Northern France that raises money for Armed Forces veterans and their families. See helpforheroes.org.uk for moreDid you know Cyclist is also stunning monthly print magazine?Subscribe now at store.cyclist.co.uk/cycpod and get every issue for less than in the shops, delivered straight to your door.And it's also a rather lovely website about everything road cycling and gravel. Check us out at cyclist.co.uk Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
• Holiday food, fellowship, and Hollerbach's holiday events • Krampus vs. St. Nick wrestling and stoner-Santa jokes • Photos with St. Nicholas, gifts for kids, German décor, holiday market, and Haribo talk • Colette Fehr joins the Friday Free Show • Thanksgiving camping recap and Giant Recreation World promos • RV rentals, luxury setups, and modern RV color trends • Jokes about Tom's ancestry, DNA-test surprises, and secret-family discoveries • Emotional impact of unexpected biological relatives • Promotion of Colette's book *The Cost of Quiet* and her packed launch schedule • Challenges of book promotion, media spots, and hosting two podcasts • Love Thy Neighbor podcast rankings and availability • Book themes: expressing needs, avoiding self-abandonment, changing harsh self-talk • Everyone—including therapists—struggles with self-doubt • Colette's appearance on a hostile debate podcast and the misogyny she witnessed • Troll backlash toward her and OnlyFans creators on that show • Silver lining: landing a Godmothers bookstore event • Reality of non-celebrity book promotion and publisher expectations • Idea for a behind-the-scenes radio-era book • Inspiration for her book: 14 years of therapy work and personal divorce • Traditional publishing gatekeeping and landing a Penguin Random House deal • Traditional vs. self-publishing and the benefits of a major publisher • Visiting the PRH building and joking about real penguins • Upcoming podcast with her husband and his anxiety about it • Couples therapy experience, communication work, and opposites-attract dynamics • Remote recording setup (Winter Park vs. Dubai) • Normalizing messy but functional marriages • Critique of "too perfect" self-help gurus and Liver King deception • Scandals rarely ending creators' careers • Ethics and the choice not to scam audiences • Persona amplification online: wrestlers, radio hosts, trolls • Perez Hilton's shift away from aggressive trolling • January 29 book-launch event details and book-purchase ticketing • Purpose of the book: helping people communicate, not chasing fame • Complaints about Tracy's gift-bag photo incident • Introduction of metal band Ousted and marijuana-card sponsors • New Tom & Dan merch announcements • Kids listening to the show and Elf on the Shelf traditions • Increasingly elaborate elf setups and AI-generated elf videos • Debate about AI "magic" vs. childhood imagination • Ethical concerns about realistic Santa/elf AI footage • Parents' fear of lying, trust issues, and when kids learn the truth • Commercial AI services selling holiday overlays • Escalation worry: parents overextending the magic • News about Frosty voice actor Jackie Vernon having secret families • How secret families form, motives behind them, and emotional fallout • DNA tests revealing hidden relatives and identity crises • Debate on whether someone with two families can be a "good dad" • Childhood memories of sneaking out and risky teen behavior • Modern over-monitoring vs. allowing independence • Phones as anxiety amplifiers, GPS glitches, and negative alerts • Desire for unplugged family vacations • Tromp family shared-delusion case and folie à plusieurs explanation • Emotional contagion, fear contagion, cult-like dynamics • Transition to therapy topics: clients falling for therapists and transference • Therapists maintaining strict boundaries and ethical rules • Reasons for firing clients and confidentiality limits in couples therapy • Misconception that couples therapy is about "winning" • Etiquette of seeing clients in public and HIPAA challenges • Therapists declining gifts and the feelings that creates • Colette wrapping up, promoting her book, and plans to return • Show reminders about next Thursday's episode and upcoming BDM show ### • Social Media: https://tomanddan.com | https://twitter.com/tomanddanlive | https://facebook.com/amediocretime | https://instagram.com/tomanddanlive• Where to Find the Show: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/a-mediocre-time/id334142682 | https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkLnBvZGJlYW4uY29tL2FtZWRpb2NyZXRpbWUvcG9kY2FzdC54bWw | https://tunein.com/podcasts/Comedy/A-Mediocre-Time-p364156/• Tom & Dan on Real Radio 104.1: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/a-corporate-time/id975258990 | https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkLnBvZGJlYW4uY29tL2Fjb3Jwb3JhdGV0aW1lL3BvZGNhc3QueG1s | https://tunein.com/podcasts/Comedy/A-Corporate-Time-p1038501/• Exclusive Content: https://tomanddan.com/registration• Merch: https://tomanddan.myshopify.com/
What is Travel Tuesday? Also, how epic is this new Burger King meal? We talk about the Haribo power banks controversy, Chuck E Cheese getting a Christmas movie, and lots more!
Exorbitant orbs! Danny puts the Chess in Chessington. York becomes one parkrun fewer. 'That' Facebook group is mothballed. Dame Kelly's grading. Nicola does a spot of heavy breathing and Danny goes back to his very origins alongside his marshalling parents at Stanborough parkrun Lakes in Welwyn Garden City.
The sweetner used in the sugar free variety of these gummi bears will tear you up if you eat too many at one time. The reviews online of this product are a riot...and perfect topic for a song! There's a dance mix of this one too. Music video here . Please Follow and Subscribe at YouTube, TT, and IG (@kurplunkmusic) for new funny videos! All songs from the current album can be heard (and seen!) at our YouTube channel, plus behind the scenes content. More info and links to all our socials at Please Follow and Subscribe at YouTube, TT, and IG (@kurplunkmusic) for new funny videos! All songs from the current album can be heard (and seen!) at our YouTube channel, plus behind the scenes content. More info and links to all our socials at kurplunk.lol. Thanks for listening!
In this episode we spoke with Damien Wong, Senior Vice President for Asia Pacific at Tricentis, about how Agentic AI is redefining software quality assurance (QA) for enterprises navigating digital transformation. Damien shared his journey through 30 years in enterprise technology and explained how Tricentis is pioneering a future where autonomous testing drives both speed and reliability in software delivery. We explored why QA is fast becoming a board-level priority, how AI is removing the human bottlenecks in testing, and why quality is now existential in sectors like finance, healthcare, and government. Key Insights: • From manual to agentic: QA has evolved from manual testing to script-based automation, to codeless model-based testing, and now to agentic test automation. The equivalent of moving from driving a car to a fully autonomous vehicle. • AI-accelerated quality: Tricentis' agentic automation enables systems to autonomously create, execute, and adapt tests, dramatically accelerating release cycles and reducing risk from untested code. • Quality as a board concern: In Tricentis' Quality Transformation Report, two-thirds of organizations admitted to shipping untested code, making QA failures a C-suite and reputational risk rather than an IT issue. • Compliance through transparency: With acquisitions like SeaLights, Tricentis helps enterprises prove that every code change has been tested—critical for regulated sectors and global compliance. • Bring-your-own-AI flexibility: Tricentis' support for the Model Context Protocol (MCP) allows companies to plug in their own private AI models, ensuring data security and regulatory control while leveraging AI capabilities. • Empowering, not replacing, engineers: AI-driven testing shifts QA teams from repetitive test creation to strategic oversight, while tools like NeoLoad with natural language prompts make performance testing accessible to non-technical users. • Industry impact: From Zespri's self-healing ERP testing to preventing outages like Haribo's global gummy bear disruption, intelligent QA ensures business continuity and customer trust. • Future outlook: With 90% of code expected to be AI-generated within a year, the ability to test at AI speed will define competitive advantage in enterprise software delivery. IoT ONE case study database: https://www.iotone.com/case-studies The Industrial IoT Spotlight podcast is produced by Asia Growth Partners (AGP): https://asiagrowthpartners.com
Mike and Tom get gummy with Haribo Fruit Salad. Join the MATES Club for even more snacking: https://realm.supportingcast.fm/matesclub Watch MATES on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MikeAndTomEatSnacks Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Helena était l'invitée du Double Expresso RTL2 ce vendredi 3 octobre pour une session live en direct. La chanteuse, révélée pour sa sensibilité pop et sa voix singulière, a interprété deux titres en live : "Mauvais Garçon" et son single "Tout a changé (rien a changé)", actuellement en playlist et accompagné d'un clip tout juste dévoilé. Helena a également évoqué sa tournée en cours et sa participation très attendue au RTL2 Pop-Rock Live au Trianon, où elle se produira le 10 octobre prochain. L'info du matin - Grégory Ascher et Justine Salmon se sont intéressés à l'influence des séries et des livres sur nos envies de voyage. Un roman ou un épisode peut-il vraiment nous donner envie de réserver un billet ? Le winner du jour - Hospitalisé six jours pour avoir mangé 3 kg de bonbons Haribo en trois jours... notre premier winner a (littéralement) vu la vie en gélatine. - Un aventurier relie les sommets français à pied : Vosges, Jura, Alpes, Pyrénées... en 42 jours chrono ! Les savoirs inutiles - Le concombre de mer est peut-être l'animal marin le plus improbable : il respire... par l'anus ! Une méthode originale mais efficace pour cet échinoderme cousin des étoiles de mer. La chanson du jour - Jonas Brothers "Sucker" Le jeu RTL2 Pop-Rock Live - Carolina de Rennes remporte son séjour à Paris avec invitations VIP pour le RTL2 Pop Rock Live du 10 octobre au Trianon ! Le jeu surprise (Le petit bac) - Hjila (prononcé Djila) de Vienne repart avec des écouteurs sans fil FORCE PLAY. La banque RTL2 - Vincent de Montbizot (vers Le Mans) remporte 1 000 €. - Ambre d'Abbeville-Saint-Lucien (vers Beauvais) gagne une PlayStation 5. Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Tom Tugendhat Returns. Again!Friend of the show Tom Tugendhat returns to give us the perspective from the Tory backbenches.Why are so many Tories defecting to Reform?How worried is he about the Tommy Robinson march?Is he still addicted to Haribo?THE POLITICAL PARTY LIVE6 October: Bridget Philipsonhttps://nimaxtheatres.com/shows/the-political-party-with-matt-forde/ SEE Matt's brand new stand-up tour 'Defying Calamity' across the UK:https://www.mattforde.com/live-shows Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week the gang talks bitter noodles and savors Summerween candy in the snews! Support this podcast at https://www.patreon.com/LetsTalkAboutSnacks -- Snack News: Sherbert or Sherbet? It Turns Out, America Is Divided: https://www.foodandwine.com/sherbert-vs-sherbet-11772873 Fruity Pebbles-Flavored Water Is a Real Thing — and It's Already at Walmart: https://www.foodandwine.com/liquid-death-fruity-pebbles-cereal-criminal-11770142 Haribo celebrates Summerween with Halloween candies: https://www.snackandbakery.com/articles/114100-haribo-celebrates-summerween-with-halloween-candies Taco Bell Is Launching Sweet Chipotle BBQ Crispy Chicken — and Other New Menu Items: https://people.com/taco-bell-is-launching-sweet-chipotle-bbq-crispy-chicken-and-other-new-menu-items-11774308 Kool-Aid Just Dropped ‘Unreal' and Frightening New Candy That Fans Say They ‘Can't Wait' to Try: https://parade.com/food/kool-aid-new-ghoul-aid-candy Locate Lauren on Twitter (@rawrglicious) and Bluesky(@rawrglicious.bsky.social)! Find Conrad on Twitter (@ConradZimmerman) and peruse his other projects on this Linktree thing. Linda can be located on Instagram (@shoresofpluto)! Logo by Cosmignon! See more of her cool art at https://www.cosmignon.info/ Music by Michael "Skitch" Schiciano. Hear more of his work at https://skitch.bandcamp.com/
Le Tour de France, c'est donc 184 coureurs, 23 équipes et une trentaine de marques qui composent la caravane publicitaire. Et vous allez voir comme c'est un véritable supermarché. Cette année encore il y aura Leclerc, Cochonou, Panzani, Tourtel, les cafés Senséo, les volailles le Gaulois, l'huile d'olive Puget, les bonbons Haribo, La Vache qui rit et j'en passe... Ecoutez Olivier Dauvers : les secrets de la conso du 04 juillet 2025.Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Alex and Kevin bring you a solo episode, live from global headquarters in Greenpoint Brooklyn! They discuss the Hot Dog Eating Contest, Buffalo Wild Wings' Mountain Dew Radler, Micheal Beirut taking a step back at Pentagram, Benson Boone's Moonbeam Ice Cream Cookie, Linkin Park x Haribo, Heinz Mustard, Drake's abs, Travis Scott's Erewhon Smoothie, Subway's Happy Gilmore mea;, and more!
In this episode of BRAVE COMMERCE, Rachel Tipograph and Sarah Hofstetter speak with Rick LaBerge, Chief Commercial Officer of HARIBO of America. Rick shares how HARIBO has grown household penetration in the U.S. from 10 to 28 percent in the last decade while staying focused on its founding values of quality, trust, and childlike happiness.He discusses the unique challenges and advantages of working for a century-old, family-run company with deep roots in care, as well as the importance of manufacturing locally and understanding the American shopper. Rick also highlights how HARIBO is translating the joyful, colorful in-store candy experience to digital commerce, and what it takes to build lasting retailer relationships.Key takeawaysLong-term thinking drives growth. HARIBO's U.S. success stems from investing in local manufacturing, understanding seasonal rituals, and making product decisions with generational goals in mindBrand values create differentiation. Staying focused on joy, quality, and trust has helped HARIBO outperform competitors in a crowded candy categoryDigital experience matters. Translating HARIBO's visual, sensory brand into eCommerce environments has been key to driving conversion online Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ep 216 | This week on Discover Ag, Natalie and Tara dive into the drama, empowerment, and pop culture impact behind the new Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders documentary series. From a jaw-dropping 400% pay raise to emotional audition cuts, they unpack what's changed for these iconic performers and what still needs work. Natalie and Tara also celebrate the winners of the Discover Ag NASCAR giveaway and tease a DISCOs meetup. From there, they break down some surprising food headlines: a Haribo candy recall linked to cannabis, misleading claims about soil health and “only 60 harvests left,” and what's really driving nutrient loss in our food system. If you've ever wondered whether expired Sour Punch Straws are a real threat (spoiler: not really) or felt confused about breeding vs. GMOs when it comes to flavor and nutrition, this episode is for you. What We Discovered This Week
大家週ㄧ愉快!本集節目為台灣時間6/9的節目 如何開啟Podcast訂閱服務 Patreon訂閱往這邊走 免費訂閱通勤精釀電子報 合作邀約請聯繫:onthewaytowork2020@gmail.com IG: @onthe_waytowork https://www.instagram.com/onthe_waytowork/ Powered by Firstory Hosting
UHOH! The Booger King is BACK and he has a VERY personal message; he heard each and every dirty little slander attack that Jake Young from 'Nerd Of Mouth' did DARE TO SLING last episode, and this CHARACTER ASSASSINATION will NOT CONTINUE. He's here with aaaaallllllll the 'Tay News' that PROVES he is the one, true Tayenator regardless of the BRAINLESS rumors being spread by A TRAITOR!BIG TAY NEWS! She got her masters back, but that's got people feelin' duped, BUT ALSO the subpoena from Justin Baldoni has been DROPPED. Holden's Future Sight has been confirmed, Kylie Jenner is gettin' into the TITTY GRITTY about them honkers in a response to a social media comment 'cause they asked, HILARIA Baldwin proved she's TOTALLY FINE with all the jokes online...by spending money and time to recreate fanart making fun of her and replying to nasty comments onli-WHENIAMTALKINGYOUARENOTTALKING, Jackie's tryin' to do her part to SAVE THE KIDS by buyin' up all them MARIHUANA contaminated Haribo gummies but then she realized they were the 'Fizzy Cola' ones and ew, no. But she is LOOOOOOSIN' IIIITTTTTT over all them Oreo collabs lately, including the Coke collab. A POX UPON WHOEVER SET UP THAT LITTLE GIRL WHO SANG 'MOANA' ACAPELLA ON THE DELAYED FLIGHT, AND JUSTICE FOR MS RACHEL. Then onto THE LIST of 'Famous Actors Who Were Killed, Kidnapped, or Otherwise Seriously Traumatized On MOVIESEEEETTSSS!!!', the Blindz, and Jackie's Snackies from 1:01:51.928 - 1:08:40.471 with MJ's Minute Munchies @ 1:06:19.679!Want even more Page 7? Support us on Patreon! Patreon.com/Page7Podcast Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of Page 7 ad-free.Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus.
On this week’s show Chris and Aaron talk about: pets, Memorial Day weekend, doing mushrooms, Mission Impossible: Final Reckoning, Todd Christley gets a pardon, the Enhanced Games, Haribo recalls laced gummies, and a man in Okinawa busted for cannabis. Please follow us on Twitter @TheWeedsmen420, Instagram @TheWeedsmenPotcast, and on Facebook at Facebook.com/TheWeedsmenPotcast/ Download the rest... The post Juicin' first appeared on Christopher Media.
In this episode of "Normal World," Dave Landau, 1/4 Black Garrett, and Angela cover headlines about a Haribo gummy recall, a nudist march in Mexico City, and a bizarre case of brain-eating bacteria linked to Texas tap water. They unpack Greta Thunberg's alleged boat voyage to Gaza, awkward museum tours involving Hitler letters, and the viral launch of Sydney Sweeney's bathwater-infused soap. That soap leads to a “half-assed” Top 10 list of cursed celebrity product ideas you definitely don't want to buy. Other topics include Tinder's new height filter, deranged funeral plans (featuring postmortem implants), and a surprise studio appearance by an unpredictable mystery guest who instantly derails the show. Sponsors Try your first month of BlueChew FREE when you use promo code NORMAL -- just pay $5 shipping. Go to https://bluechew.com/ Go to Angel.com/NORMAL to grab your seats for The Last Rodeo Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Grafa se vratio u Njuz Podkast! U epizodi 194 detaljno analiziramo goruće teme: od "Ćacija" i njihovog dijaloga sa Vučićem, preko kontroverznog incidenta sa farbom na koncertu Beogradskog Sindikata, do šokantnih tvrdnji Marinike Tepić o kokainu i misterioznoj slici. Da li će ChatGPT zameniti satiričare? Šta nam poručuje Vučić svojim Instagram objavama o hrani, a šta Miša Vacić svojim najnovijim lapsusom? Plus, sve o našim predstojećim nastupima i humanitarnoj akciji! VIDIMO SE UŽIVO: SMEDEREVO: 15. jun (Ned), 19h - MKS Kombinat (FREE) SARAJEVO: 20. jun (Pet) - Kino Meeting Point (Karte: Karter.ba) SREMSKA MITROVICA: 29. jun (Sub), 19h - Buk Bar (FREE)
Haribo is investigating how one of its popular gummy products apparently became tainted with cannabis after several people reportedly fell ill in the Netherlands. Dr. Squatch Soap Co. is selling - Sydney Sweeny Bathwater Bliss. Bars of soap mixed with her bath water. PETA demands renaming ‘World Milk Day' to 'Bovine Mammary Secretion Day'. Denver Broncos QB, Bo Nix is saying all the right things. Cleveland Browns QB, Joe Flacco isn't interested in being a mentor. Creepy lemonade stand guy. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Haribo is investigating how one of its popular gummy products apparently became tainted with cannabis after several people reportedly fell ill in the Netherlands. Dr. Squatch Soap Co. is selling - Sydney Sweeny Bathwater Bliss. Bars of soap mixed with her bath water. PETA demands renaming ‘World Milk Day' to 'Bovine Mammary Secretion Day'. Denver Broncos QB, Bo Nix is saying all the right things. Cleveland Browns QB, Joe Flacco isn't interested in being a mentor. Creepy lemonade stand guy.
In this week's episode of High on Home Grown, the panel covers the latest cannabis headlines from the UK, US, and Europe: Macky covers the controversial push from the Wiltshire Police and Crime Commissioner, who supports reclassifying cannabis as a Class A drug in the UK. (Source: BBC News) In contrast, London's Mayor backs a new report calling for cannabis decriminalisation, showing deep divisions in UK cannabis policy. (Source: BBC News) Haribo issues a recall in the Netherlands after cannabis was found in one of their products. (Source: BBC News) A new study finds potential health risks from both smoking cannabis and eating edibles, particularly for cardiovascular health. John discusses how Kentucky's Governor has launched a dispensary map ahead of the state's medical cannabis rollout and waived renewal fees for patients. Also in the US, the Trump administration still hasn't decided whether to challenge the major Supreme Court case linking marijuana use and gun ownership. Join us as we break down these important stories and what they mean for cannabis users and the industry worldwide! Come and join in the discussion about any of these news articles on our cannabis growing forum, Discord server, or any of your favourite social networks. Visit our website for links. Website: https://highonhomegrown.com Discord: https://discord.gg/sqYGkF4xyQ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/highonhomegrown Thank you for downloading and listening to our cannabis podcast! I hope you enjoy this episode.
This episode features not only the titular Roman Robot and a (potentially) BAFTA-winning sitcom idea — but James ALSO chucks in a selection of ghostly tales from the Cirencester area. You know, like when you've ordered something online and you get tiny bag of free Haribo. Enjoy! This episode was edited by Joseph Burrows - Audio Editor Join the LoreFolk at patreon.com/loremenpod ko-fi.com/loremen Check the sweet, sweet merch here... https://www.teepublic.com/stores/loremen-podcast?ref_id=24631 @loremenpod youtube.com/loremenpodcast www.instagram.com/loremenpod www.facebook.com/loremenpod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Join Fr. Dave and Dcn. Bob on They That Hope as they celebrate Alex Ovechkin breaking Wayne Gretzky's goal-scoring record and discuss the thrilling conclusion of the college basketball season. They share humorous anecdotes about meeting famous people, the Haribo sugar-free gummy bear reviews, and the Minecraft movie. They also reflect on the beauty of Palm Sunday and explore how we can integrate faith in everyday life with insights from Arthur Brooks. Plus, don't miss out on their plans for a live podcast from a baseball game next week!