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Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 369 – Unstoppable Marketing Strategist with Aaron Wolpoff

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2025 64:03


Our guest this time is Aaron Wolpoff who has spent his professional career as a marketing strategist and consultant to help companies develop strategic brands and enhance their audience growth. He owns the marketing firm, Double Zebra. He tells us about the name and how his company has helped a number of large and small companies grow and better serve their clients.   Aaron grew up in the San Diego area. He describes himself as a curious person and he says he always has been such. He loves to ask questions. He says as a child he was somewhat quiet, but always wanted to know more. He received his Bachelor's degree in marketing from the University of California at San Diego. After working for a firm for some four and a half years he and his wife moved up to the bay area in Northern California where attended San Francisco State University and obtained a Master's degree in Business.   In addition to his day job functioning as a business advisor and strategist Aaron also hosts a podcast entitled, We Fixed it, You're Welcome. I had the honor to appear on his podcast to discuss Uber and some of its accessibility issues especially concerning access by blind persons who use guide dogs to Uber's fleet. His podcast is quite fascinating and one I hope you will follow.   Aaron provides us in this episode many business insights. We talk about a number of challenges and successes marketing has brought to the business arena. I hope you like what Aaron offers.     About the Guest:   Aaron Wolpoff is a seasoned marketing strategist and communications consultant with a track record of positioning companies, products, and thought leadership for maximum impact. Throughout his career, Aaron has been somewhat of a trendspotter, getting involved in early initiatives around online banking, SaaS, EVs, IoT, and now AI, His ability to bridge complex industry dynamics and technology-driven solutions underscores his role as a forward-thinking consultant, podcaster, and business advisor, committed to enhancing organizational effectiveness and fostering strategic growth.   As the driving force behind the Double Zebra marketing company, Aaron excels in identifying untapped marketing assets, refining brand narratives, and orchestrating strategic pivots from paid advertising to organic audience growth. His insights have guided notable campaigns for consumer brands, technology firms, and professional service providers, always with a keen eye for differentiating messages that resonate deeply with target audiences. In addition to his strategic marketing expertise, Aaron hosts the Top 20 business management podcast, We Fixed It, You're Welcome, known for its sharp, humorous analysis of major corporate challenges and missteps. Each episode brings listeners inside complex business scenarios, unfolding like real-time case studies where Aaron and his panel of experts dissect high-profile decisions, offering insightful and actionable solutions. His ability to distill complex business issues into relatable, engaging discussions has garnered widespread acclaim and a dedicated following among executives and decision-makers.   Ways to connect with Aaron:   Marketing company: https://doublezebra.com Podcast: https://wefixeditpod.com LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/marketingaaron     About the Host:   Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog.   Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards.   https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/   accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/       Thanks for listening!   Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below!   Subscribe to the podcast   If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can subscribe in your favorite podcast app. You can also support our podcast through our tip jar https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/unstoppable-mindset .   Leave us an Apple Podcasts review   Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts.       Transcription Notes:   Michael Hingson ** 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us.   Michael Hingson ** 01:20 Hi there, and welcome to another episode of unstoppable mindset. Today, we get to chat with Aaron Wolpoff, who is a marketing strategist and expert in a lot of different ways. I've read his bio, which you can find in the show notes. It seems to me that he is every bit as much of an expert is his bio says he is, but we're going to find out over the next hour or so for sure. We'll we'll not pick on him too much, but, but nevertheless, it's fun to be here. Aaron, so I want to welcome you to unstoppable mindset. I'm glad you're here, and we're glad that we get a chance to do   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 01:58 this. Thanks, Michael, thanks for having me. You're gonna grill me for an hour, huh?   Michael Hingson ** 02:04 Oh, sure. Why not? You're used to it. You're a marketing expert.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 02:08 That's what we do. Yeah, we're always, uh, scrutiny for one thing or another.   Michael Hingson ** 02:13 I remember, I think it was back in was it 82 or 1982 or 1984 when they had the big Tylenol incident. You remember that? You know about   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 02:25 that? I do? Yeah, there's a Netflix documentary happening right now. Is there? Well, yeah,   Michael Hingson ** 02:31 a bottle of Tylenol was, for those who don't know, contaminated and someone died from it. But the manufacturer of Tylenol, the CEO the next day, just got right out in front of it and said what they were going to do about removing all Tylenol from the shelves until it could be they could all be examined and so on. Just did a number of things. It was a wonderful case, it seemed to me, for how to deal with a crisis when it came up. And I find that all too many companies and organizations don't necessarily know how to do that. Do they now?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 03:09 And a lot of times they operate in crisis mode. That's the default. And no one likes to be around that, you know. So that's, I guess, step one is dealing even you know, deal with a crisis when it comes up, and make sure that your your day to day is not crisis fire as much as possible,   Michael Hingson ** 03:26 but know how to deal with a crisis, which is kind of the issue, and that's, that's what business continuity, of course, is, is really all about. I spoke at the Business Continuity Institute hybrid conference in London last October, and as one of the people who asked me to come and speak, explained, business continuity, people are the what if people that are always looking at, how do we deal with any kind of an emergency that comes up in an organization, knowing full well that nobody's really going to listen to them until there's really an emergency, and then, of course, they're indispensable, but The rest of the time they're not for   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 04:02 sure. Yeah, it's definitely that, you know, good. You bring up a good point about knowing how to deal with a crisis, because it will, it, will you run a business for long enough you have a company, no matter how big, eventually something bad is going to happen, and it's Tylenol. Was, is pre internet or, you know, we oh, yeah, good while ago they had time to formulate a response and craft it and and do a well presented, you know, public reassurance nowadays it's you'd have five seconds before you have to get something out there.   Michael Hingson ** 04:35 Well, even so, the CEO did it within, like, a day or so, just immediately came out and said what, what was initially going to be done. Of course, there was a whole lot more to it, but still, he got right out in front of it and dealt with it in a calm way, which I think is really important for businesses to do, and and I do find that so many don't and they they deal with so many different kinds of stress. Horrible things in the world, and they create more than they really should about fear anyway,   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 05:07 yeah, for sure, and now I think that Tylenol wasn't ultimately responsible. I haven't watched to the end, but if I remember correctly, but sometimes these crisis, crises that companies find themselves embroiled in, are self perpetuated? Yeah?   Michael Hingson ** 05:23 Well, Tylenol wasn't responsible. Somebody did it. Somebody put what, cyanide or something in into a Tylenol bottle. So they weren't responsible, but they sure dealt with it, which is the important thing. And you know, they're, they're still with us. Yeah?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 05:38 No, they dealt with it. Well, their sales are great, everyday household product. No one can dispute it. But what I say is, with the with the instantaneousness of reach to your to your public, and to you know, consumers and public at large, a lot of crises are, can be self perpetuated, like you tweet the wrong thing, or is it called a tweet anymore? I don't know, but you know, you post something a little bit a little bit out of step with what people are think about you or thinking in general, and and now, all of a sudden, you're in the middle of something that you didn't want to be in the middle of, as a company well,   Michael Hingson ** 06:15 and I also noticed that, like the media will, so often they hear something, they report it, and they haven't necessarily checked to see the facts behind it, only to find out within an hour or two that what they reported was wrong. And they helped to sometimes promote the fear and promote the uncertainty, rather than waiting a little bit until they get all the information reasonably correct. And of course, part of the problem is they say, well, but everybody else is going to report it. So each station says everybody else is going to report it, so we have to keep up. Well, I'm not so sure about that all the time. Oh, that's very true, too, Michael, especially with, you know, off brand media outlets I'll spend with AI like, I'll be halfway through an article now, and I'll see something that's extremely generated and and I'll realize I've just wasted a whole bunch of time on a, you know, on a fake article, yeah, yeah, yeah, way, way too much. But even the mainstream media will report things very quickly to get it out there, but they don't necessarily have all the data, right. And I understand you can't wait for days to deal with things, but you should wait at least a little bit to make sure you've got data enough to report in a cogent way. And it just doesn't always happen.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 07:33 Yeah, well, I don't know who the watch keepers of that are. I'm not a conspiracy theorist in that way by any means?   Michael Hingson ** 07:41 No, no, it isn't a conspiracy. But yeah,   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 07:44 yeah, no, no, I know, but it's again. I think it goes back to that tight the shortness of the cycle, like again. Tylenol waited a day to respond back in the day, which is great. But now, would you have you know, if Tylenol didn't say   Michael Hingson ** 07:59 anything for a day. If they were faced with a similar situation, people would vilify them and say, Well, wait, you waited a day to tell us something we wanted it in the first 30 seconds, yeah, oh, yeah. And that makes it more difficult, but I would hope that Tylenol would say, yeah. We waited a day because we were getting our facts together. 30 seconds is great in the media, but that doesn't work for reality, and in most cases, it doesn't. But yeah, I know what you're saying,   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 08:30 Yeah, but the appetite in the 24 hour news cycle, if people are hungry for new more information, so it does push news outlets, media outlets into let's respond as quick as possible and figure out the facts along the way. Yeah, yeah.   Michael Hingson ** 08:46 Well, for fun, why don't you tell us about sort of the early era and growing up, and how you got to doing the sorts of things that you're doing now. Well, I grew up in San Diego, California. I best weather in the country. I don't care what anyone says, Yeah,   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 09:03 you can't really beat it. No, I don't think anyone's gonna debate you on it. They call it the sunshine tax, because things cost a lot out here, but they do, you know, he grew up here, you put up with it. But yeah, so I grew up, grew up San Diego, college, San Diego. Life in San Diego, I've been elsewhere. I've traveled. I've seen some of the world. I like it. I've always wanted to come back, but I grew up really curious. I read a lot, I asked a lot of questions. And I also wanted, wanting to know, well, I want to know. Well, I wanted to know a lot of things about a lot of things, and I also was really scared. Is the wrong word, but I looked up to adults when I was a kid, and I didn't want to be put in a position where I was expected to know something that I didn't know. So it led to times where I'd pretend like I need you. Know, do you know? You know what this is, right? And I'd pretend like I knew, and early career, career even, and then I get called out on something, and it just was like a gut punch, like, but I'm supposed to know that, you know,   Michael Hingson ** 10:13 what did your parents think of you being so curious as you were growing up?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 10:17 They they liked it, but I was quiet, okay? Quiet, quiet, quietly, confident and curious. It's just an interesting, I guess, an interesting mix. Yeah, but no, they Oh, they indulged it. I, you know, they answered my questions. They like I said, I read a lot, so frequent trips to the library to read a lot about a lot of things, but I think, you know, professionally, you take something that's kind of a grab bag, and what do I do with all these different interests? And when I started college undeclared, I realized, you know, communications, marketing, you kind of can make a discipline out of a bunch of interests, and call it something professional. Where did you go to college? I went to UCSD. UCSD, here in San Diego, yeah,   Michael Hingson ** 11:12 well, I was just up the road from you at UC Irvine. So here two good campuses,   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 11:18 they are, they are and UCSD. I was back recently. It's like a it's like a city. Now, every time we go back, we see these, these kids. They're babies. They get they get food every you know, they have, like, a food nice food court. There's parking, an abundance of parking, there's theaters, there's all the things we didn't have. Of course, we had some of it, but they just have, like, what if we had one of something or 50 parking spaces, they've got 5000 you know. And if we had, you know, one one food option, they got 35 Yeah, they don't know how good they have it.   Michael Hingson ** 11:53 When I was at UC urban, I think we had 3200 undergraduates. It wasn't huge. It was in that area. Now, I think there's 31,000 or 32,000 undergrads. Oh, wow. And as one of my former physics professors joked, he's retired, but I got to meet him. I was there, and last year I was inducted as an alumni member of Phi, beta, kappa. And so we were talking, and he said, You know what UCI really stands for, don't you? Well, I didn't, I said, What? And he said, under construction indefinitely. And there's, they're always building, sure, and that's that started when I was there, but, but they are always building. And it's just an amazing place today, with so many students and graduate students, undergrads and faculty, and it's, it's an amazing place. I think I'd have a little bit more of a challenge of learning where everything is, although I could do it, if I had to go back, I could do it. Yeah, UCI is nice. But I think you could say, you could say that about any of the UCs are constantly under, under development. And, you know, that's the old one. That's the old area. And I'm like, oh, that's I went to school in the old area. I know the old area. I remember Central Park. Yeah, for sure. Yeah. So you ended up majoring in Marketing and Communications,   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 13:15 yeah. So I undergrad in communications. They have a really nice business school now that they did not have at the time. So I predated that, but I probably would have ended up there. I got out with a very, not knocking the school. It's a great, wonderful school. I got out with a very theory, theoretical based degree. So I knew a lot about communications from a theory based perspective. I knew about brain cognition. I took maybe one quarter of practical use it professionally. It was like a video, like a video production course, so I I learned hands on, 111, quarter out of my entire academic career. But a lot of it was learning. The learning not necessarily applied, but just a lot of theory. And I started school at 17, and I got out just shortly after my 21st birthday, so I don't know what my hurry was, but, but there I was with a lot of theory, some some internships, but not a ton of professional experience. And, you know, trying to figure it out in the work world at that point. Did you get a graduate degree or just undergrad? I did. I went back. So I did it for almost five years in in financial marketing, and then, and I wear a suit and tie to work every day, which I don't think anyone does anymore. And I'm suddenly like, like, I'm from the 30s. I'm not that old, but, but no, seriously, we, you know, to work at the at the headquarters of a international credit union. Of course, I wear a suit, no after four and a half. Years there, I went back to graduate school up in the bay the Bay Area, Bay Area, and that's when I got my masters in in marketing. Oh, where'd you go in the Bay Area? San Francisco, state. Okay, okay, yeah, really nice school. It's got one of the biggest International MBA programs in the country, I think. And got to live in that city for a couple years.   Michael Hingson ** 15:24 We lived in Novato, so North Bay, for 12 years, from 2002 to the end of June 2014 Yeah, I like that area. That's, that's the, oh, the weather isn't San Diego's. That area is still a really nice area to live as well. Again, it is pretty expensive, but still it   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 15:44 is, yeah, I it's not San Diego weather, a beautiful day. There is like nothing else. But when we first got there, I said, I want to live by the beach. That's what I know. And we got out to the beach, which is like at the end of the outer sunset, and it's in the 40s streets, and it feels like the end of the universe. It just, it just like, feels apocalyptic. And I said, I don't want to live by the beach anymore, but, but no, it was. It was a great, great learning experience, getting an MBA. I always say it's kind of like a backpack or a toolkit you walk around with, because it is all that's all application. You know, everything that I learned about theory put into practice, you got to put into practice. And so I was, I was really glad that I that I got to do that. And like I said, Live, live in, live in the Bay. For a couple years, I'd always wanted   Michael Hingson ** 16:36 to, yeah, well, that's a nice area to live. If you got to live somewhere that is one of the nicer places. So glad you got that opportunity. And having done it, as I said for 12 years, I appreciate it too. And yeah, so much to offer there.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 16:51 The only problem I had was it was in between the two.com bubbles. So literally, nothing was happening. The good side was that the apartment I was living in went for something like $5,500 before I got there, and then the draw everything dropped, you know, the bottom dropped out, and I was able to squeak by and afford living in the city. But, you know, you go for look, seeking your fortune. And there's, there's, I had just missed it. And then I left, and then it just came back. So I was, I was there during a lull. So you're the one, huh? Okay, I didn't do it, just the way Miami worked out. Did you then go back to San Diego? I did, yeah. So I've met my wife here. We moved up to the bay together, and when we were debating, when I graduated, we were thinking, do we want to drive, you know, an hour and a half Silicon Valley or someone, you know, somewhere further out just to stay in the area? Or do we want to go back to where we where we know and like, and start a life there and we, you know, send, like you said at the beginning, San Diego is not a bad place to be. So as it was never a fallback, but as a place to, you know, come back home to, yeah, I welcomed it.   Michael Hingson ** 18:08 And so what did you do when you came back to San Diego?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 18:12 So I have my best friend from childhood was starting as a photography company still does, and it was starting like a sister company, as an agency to serve the photography company, which was growing really fast, and then also, like picking up clients and building a book out of so he said, you know you're, I see you're applying for jobs, and I know that you're, you know, you're getting some offers and things, but just say no To all of them and come work with me and and at the time it was, it was running out of a was like a loft of an apartment, but it, you know, it grew to us, a small staff, and then a bigger staff, and spun off on its own. And so that's, that's what I did right out of, right out of grad school. I said no to a few things, and said there's a lot, lot worse fates than you know, spending your work day with your best friend and and growing a company out and so what exactly did you do for them? So it was like, we'll call it a boutique creative agency. It was around the time of I'm making myself sound so old. See, so there was flash, flash technology, like web banners were made with Flash. It had moved to be flash, Adobe, Flash, yeah. So companies were making these web banners, and what you call interactive we got a proficiency of making full website experiences with Flash, which not a lot of companies were doing. So because of that, it led to some really interesting opportunities and clients and being able to take on a capability, a proficiency that you know for a time. Uh was, was uh as a differentiator, say, you know, you could have a web banner and an old website, or you could have a flash, interactive website where you take your users on an experience with music and all the things that seem so dated now,   Michael Hingson ** 20:14 well, and of course, unfortunately, a lot of that content wasn't very accessible, so some of us didn't really get access to a lot of it, and I don't remember whether Adobe really worked to make flash all that accessible. They dealt with other things, but I'm not sure that flash ever really was. Yeah, I'm with you on that. I really, I don't think so.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 20:38 What we would wind up doing is making parallel websites, but, but then mobile became a thing, and then you'd make a third version of a website, and it just got tedious. And really it's when the iPhone came out. It just it flash got stopped in its tracks, like it was like a week, and then action script, which is the language that it runs on, and all the all the capabilities and proficiencies, just there was no use for it anymore.   Michael Hingson ** 21:07 Well, and and the iPhone came out, as you said, and one of the things that happened fairly early on was that, because they were going to be sued, Apple agreed to make the I devices accessible, and they did something that hadn't really been done up to that time. They set the trend for it. They built accessibility into the operating systems, and they built the ability to have accessibility into the operating systems. The one thing that I wish that Apple would do even a little bit more of than they do, than they do today, although it's better than it used to be, is I wish they would mandate, or require people who are going to put apps in the App Store, for example, to make sure that the apps are accessible. They have guidelines. They have all sorts of information about how to do it, but they don't really require it, and so you can still get inaccessible apps, which is unfortunate,   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 22:09 that is Yeah, and like you said, with Flash, an entire you know, ecosystem had limited to no accessibility, so   Michael Hingson ** 22:16 and making additional on another website, Yeah, a lot of places did that, but they weren't totally equal, because they would make enough of the website, well, they would make the website have enough content to be able to do things, but they didn't have everything that they had on the graphical or flash website, and so It was definitely there, but it wasn't really, truly equal, which is unfortunate, and so now it's a lot better.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 22:46 Yeah, it is no and I hate to say it, but if it came down to limited time, limited budget, limited everything you want to make something that is usable and efficient, but no, I mean, I can't speak for all developers, but no, it would be hard. You'd be hard pressed to create a an equally parallel experience with full accessibility at the time.   Michael Hingson ** 23:16 Yeah, yeah, you would. And it is a lot better. And there's, there's still stuff that needs to be done, but I think over time, AI is going to help some of that. And it is already made. It isn't perfect yet, but even some graphics and so on can be described by AI. And we're seeing things improve over, over, kind of what they were. So we're making progress, which is good,   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 23:44 yeah, no, I'm really happy about that. And with with AI and AI can go through and parse your code and build in all you know, everything that that needs to happen, there's a lot less excuse for for not making something as accessible as it can   Michael Hingson ** 23:59 be, yeah, but people still ignore it to a large degree. Still, only about 3% of all websites really have taken the time to put some level of accessibility into them. So there's still a lot to be done, and it's just not that magical or that hard, but it's mostly, I think, education. People don't know, they don't know that it can be done. They don't think about it being done, or they don't do it initially, and so then it becomes a lot more expensive to do later on, because you got to go back and redo   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 24:28 it, all right, yeah, anything, anytime you have to do something, something retroactive or rebuild, you're, yeah, you're starting from not a great place.   Michael Hingson ** 24:37 So how long did you work with your friend?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 24:42 A really long time, because I did the studio, and then I wound up keeping that alive. But going over to the photography side, the company really grew. Had a team of staff photographers, had a team of, like a network of photographers, and. And was doing quite, quite a lot, an abundance of events every year, weddings and corporate and all types of things. So all in, I was with the company till, gosh, I want to say, like, 2014 or so. Wow. Yeah. Yeah.   Michael Hingson ** 25:21 And then what did you go off and do?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 25:25 So then I worked for an agency, so I got started with creative and, well, rewinding, I got started with financial marketing, with the suit and tie. But then I went into creative, and I've tried pretty much every aspect of marketing I hadn't done marketing automation and email sequences and CRMs and outreach and those types of things. So that was the agency I worked for that was their specialization, which I like, to a degree, but it's, it's not my, not my home base. Yeah, there's, there's people that love and breathe automation. I like having interjecting some, you know, some type of personal aspect into the what you're putting out there. And I have to wrestle with that as ai, ai keeps growing in prominence, like, Where's the place for the human, creative? But I did that for a little while, and then I've been on my own for the past six or seven years.   Michael Hingson ** 26:26 So what is it you do today? Exactly?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 26:30 So I'm, we'll call it a fractional CMO, or a fractional marketing advisor. So I come in and help companies grow their their marketing and figure themselves out. I've gone I work with large companies. I've kind of gone back to early stage startups and and tech companies. I just find that they're doing really more, a lot more interesting things right now with the market the way it is. They're taking more chances and and they're they're moving faster. I like to move pretty quick, so that's where my head's at. And I'm doing more. We'll call em like CO entrepreneurial ventures with my clients, as opposed to just a pure agency service model, which is interesting. And and I got my own podcast. There you go. Yeah. What's your podcast called? Not to keep you busy, it's called, we fixed it. You're welcome. There you   Michael Hingson ** 27:25 go. And it seems to me, if my memory hasn't failed me, even though I don't take one of those memory or brain supplements, we were on it not too long ago, talking about Uber, which was fun.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 27:39 We had you on there. I don't know which episode will drop first, this one or or the one you were on, but we sure enjoyed having you on there.   Michael Hingson ** 27:46 Well, it was fun. Well, we'll have to do more of it, and I think it'd be fun to but so you own your own business. Then today,   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 27:53 I do, yeah, it's called Double zebra.   Michael Hingson ** 27:56 Now, how did you come up with that name?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 27:59 It's two basic elements, so basic, black and white, something unremarkable, but if you can take it and multiply it or repeat it, then you're onto something interesting.   Michael Hingson ** 28:13 Lots of stripes. Yeah, lots of stripes.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 28:17 And it's always fun when I talk to someone in the UK or Australia, or then they say zebra or zebra, right? I get to hear the way they say it. It's that's fun. Occasionally I get double double zero. People will miss misname it and double zero. That's his   Michael Hingson ** 28:34 company's that. But has anybody called it double Zed yet?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 28:39 No, that's a new one.   Michael Hingson ** 28:41 Yeah? Well, you never know. Maybe we've given somebody the idea now. Yeah, yeah. Well, so I'm I'm curious. You obviously do a lot to analyze and help people in critique in corporate mishaps. Have you ever seen a particular business mistake that you really admire and just really love, its audacity,   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 29:07 where it came out wrong, but I liked it anyway, yeah, oh, man,   Michael Hingson ** 29:13 let's see, or one maybe, where they learned from their mistake and fixed it. But still, yeah, sure.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 29:23 Yeah, that's a good one. I like, I like bold moves, even if they're wrong, as long as they don't, you know, they're not harmful to people I don't know. Let's go. I'm I'm making myself old. Let's go back to Crystal crystal. Pepsi, there you go for that. But that was just such a fun idea at the time. You know, we're the new generation and, and this is the 90s, and everything's new now, and we're going to take the color out of out of soda, I know we're and we're going to take it and just make it what you know, but a little unfamiliar, right? Right? It's Crystal Pepsi, and the ads were cool, and it was just very of the moment. Now, that moment didn't last very long, no, and the public didn't, didn't hold on to it very long. But there's, you know, it was, it let you question, and I in a good way, what you thought about what is even a Pepsi. And it worked. It was they brought it back, like for a very short time, five, I want to say five or six years ago, just because people had a nostalgia for it. But yeah, big, big, bold, we're confident this is the new everyone's going to be talking about this for a long time, and we're going to put a huge budget behind it, Crystal Pepsi. And it it didn't, but yeah, I liked it.   Michael Hingson ** 30:45 So why is that that is clearly somebody had to put a lot of effort into the concept, and must have gotten some sort of message that it would be very successful, but then it wasn't,   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 31:00 yeah, yeah. For something like that, you have to get buy in at so many levels. You know, you have an agency saying, this is the right thing to do. You have CD, your leadership saying, No, I don't know. Let's pull back. Whenever an agency gets away with something and and spends a bunch of client money and it's just audacious, and I can't believe they did it. I know how many levels of buy in they had to get, yeah, to say, Trust me. Trust me. And a lot of times it works, you know, if they do something that just no one else had had thought of or wasn't willing to do, and then you see that they got through all those levels of bureaucracy and they were able to pull it off.   Michael Hingson ** 31:39 When it works. I love it. When it doesn't work. I love it, you know, just, just the fact that they did it, yeah, you got to admire that. Gotta admire it. They pulled it off, yeah. My favorite is still ranch flavored Fritos. They disappeared, and I've never understood why I love ranch flavored Fritos. And we had them in New Jersey and so on. And then we got, I think, out to California. But by that time, they had started to fade away, and I still have never understood why. Since people love ranch food so   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 32:06 much, that's a good one. I don't know that. I know those because it does, it does that one actually fill a market need. If there's Doritos, there's, you know, the ranch, I don't know if they were, they different.   Michael Hingson ** 32:17 They were Fritos, but they they did have ranch you know they were, they were ranch flavored, and I thought they were great. Yeah, I don't know. I don't know that one didn't hit because they have, I think they have chili flavor. They have regular. Do they have anything else honey barbecue? I don't know. I don't know, but I do still like regular, but I love ranch flavored the best. Now, I heard last week that Honey Nut Cheerios are going away. General Mills is getting rid of honey nut cheerios. No, is that real? That's what I heard on the news. Okay, I believe you, but I'll look it up anyway. Well, it's interesting. I don't know why, after so many years, they would but there have been other examples of cereals and so on that were around for a while and left and, well, Captain Crunch was Captain Crunch was one, and I'm not sure if lucky charms are still around. And then there was one called twinkles.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 33:13 And I know all those except twinkles, but I would if you asked me, I would say, Honey Nut Cheerios. There's I would say their sales are better than Cheerios, or at least I would think so, yeah, at least a good portfolio company. Well, who knows, who knows, but I do know that Gen Z and millennials eat cereal a lot less than us older folks, because it takes work to put milk and cereal into a bowl, and it's not pre made, yeah. So maybe it's got to do with, you know, changing eating habits and consumer preferences   Michael Hingson ** 33:48 must be Yeah, and they're not enough of us, older, more experienced people to to counteract that. But you know, well, we'll see Yeah, as long as they don't get rid of the formula because it may come back. Yeah, well, now   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 34:03 Yeah, exactly between nostalgia and reboots and remakes and nothing's gone forever, everything comes back eventually.   Michael Hingson ** 34:10 Yeah, it does in all the work that you've done. Have you ever had to completely rethink and remake your approach and do something different?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 34:24 Yeah, well, there's been times where I've been on uncharted territory. I worked with an EV company before EVs were a thing, and it was going, actually going head to head with with Tesla. But the thing there's they keep trying to bring it back and crowd sourcing it and all that stuff. It's, but at the time, it was like, I said it was like, which is gonna make it first this company, or Tesla, but, but this one looks like a, it looks, it feels like a spaceship. It's got, like space. It's a, it's, it's really. Be really unique. So the one that that is more like a family car one out probably rightly so. But there was no consumer understanding of not, let alone our preference, like there is now for an EV and what do I do? I have to plug it in somewhere and and all those things. So I had to rethink, you know what? There's no playbook for that yet. I guess I have to kind of work on it. And they were only in prototyping at the point where we came in and had to launch this, you know, teaser and teaser campaign for it, and build up awareness and demand for this thing that existed on a computer at the time.   Michael Hingson ** 35:43 What? Why is Tesla so successful?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 35:48 Because they spent a bunch of money. Okay, that helps? Yeah, they were playing the long game. They could outspend competitors. They've got the unique distribution model. And they kind of like, I said, retrained consumers into how you buy a car, why you buy a car, and, and I think politics aside, people love their people love their teslas. You don't. My understanding is you don't have to do a whole lot once you buy it. And, and they they, like I said, they had the money to throw at it, that they could wait, wait it out and wait out that when you do anything with retraining consumers or behavior change or telling them you know, your old car is bad, your new this new one's good, that's the most. We'll call it costly and and difficult forms of marketing is retraining behavior. But they, they had the money to write it out and and their products great, you know, again, I'm not a Tesla enthusiast, but it's, it looks good. People love it. I you know, they run great from everything that I know, but so did a lot of other companies. So I think they just had the confidence in what they were doing to throw money at it and wait, be patient and well,   Michael Hingson ** 37:19 they're around there again the the Tesla is another example of not nearly as accessible as it should be and and I recognize that I'm not going to be the primary driver of a Tesla today, although I have driven a Tesla down Interstate 15, about 15 miles the driver was in the car, but, but I did it for about 15 miles going down I 15 and fully appreciate what autonomous vehicles will be able to do. We're way too much still on the cusp, and I think that people who just poo poo them are missing it. But I also know we're not there yet, but the day is going to come when there's going to be a lot more reliability, a lot less potential for accidents. But the thing that I find, like with the Tesla from a passenger standpoint, is I can't do any of the things that a that a sighted passenger can do. I can't unless it's changed in the last couple of years. I can't manipulate the radio. I can't do the other things that that that passengers might do in the Tesla, and I should be able to do that, and of all the vehicles where they ought to have access and could, the Tesla would be one, and they could do it even still using touch screens. I mean, the iPhone, for example, is all touch screen. But Apple was very creative about creating a mechanism to allow a person to not need to look at the screen using VoiceOver, the screen reader on the iPhone, but having a new set of gestures that were created that work with VoiceOver so that I could interact with that screen just as well as you can.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 38:59 That's interesting that you say that, you know, Apple was working on a car for a while, and I don't know to a fact, but I bet they were thinking through accessibility and building that into every turn, or at least planning to,   Michael Hingson ** 39:13 oh, I'm sure they were. And the reality is, it isn't again. It isn't that magical to do. It would be simple for the Teslas and and other vehicles to do it. But, you know, we're we're not there mentally. And that's of course, the whole issue is that we just societally don't tend to really look at accessibility like we should. My view of of, say, the apple the iPhone, still is that they could be marketing the screen reader software that I use, which is built into the system already. They could, they could do some things to mark market that a whole lot more than they already do for sighted people. Your iPhone rings, um. You have to tap it a lot of times to be able to answer it. Why can't they create a mode when you're in a vehicle where a lot more of that is verbally, spoken and handled through voice output from the phone and voice input from you, without ever having to look at or interact with the screen.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 40:19 I bet you're right, yeah, it's just another app at that point   Michael Hingson ** 40:22 well, and it's what I do. I mean, it's the way I operate with it. So I just think that they could, they could be more creative. There's so many examples of things that begin in one way and alter themselves or become altered. The typewriter, for example, was originally developed for a blind Countess to be able to communicate with her lover without her husband finding out her husband wasn't very attentive to her anyway. But the point is that the, I think the lover, created the this device where she could actually sit down and type a letter and seal it and give it to a maid or someone to give to, to her, her friend. And that's how the typewriter other other people had created, some examples, but the typewriter from her was probably the thing that most led to what we have today.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 41:17 Oh, I didn't know that. But let me Michael, let me ask you. So I was in LA not too long ago, and they have, you know, driverless vehicles are not the form yet, but they we, I saw them around the city. What do you think about driverless vehicles in terms of accessibility or otherwise?   Michael Hingson ** 41:32 Well, again, so, so the most basic challenge that, fortunately, they haven't really pushed which is great, is okay, you're driving along in an autonomous vehicle and you lose connection, or whatever. How are you going to be able to pull it off to the side of the road? Now, some people have talked about saying that there, there has to be a law that only sighted people could well the sighted people a sighted person has to be in the vehicle. The reality is, the technology has already been developed to allow a blind person to get behind the wheel of a car and have enough information to be able to drive that vehicle just as well, or nearly as well, as a sighted person. But I think for this, from the standpoint of autonomousness, I'm all for it. I think we're going to continue to see it. It's going to continue to get better. It is getting better daily. So I haven't ridden in a fully autonomous vehicle, but I do believe that that those vehicles need to make sure, or the manufacturers need to make sure that they really do put accessibility into it. I should be able to give the vehicle all the instructions and get all the information that any sighted person would get from the vehicle, and the technology absolutely exists to do that today. So I think we will continue to see that, and I think it will get better all the way around. I don't know whether, well, I think they that actually there have been examples of blind people who've gotten into an autonomous vehicle where there wasn't a sighted person, and they've been able to function with it pretty well. So I don't see why it should be a problem at all, and it's only going to get   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 43:22 better. Yeah, for sure. And I keep thinking, you know, accessibility would be a prior priority in autonomous vehicles, but I keep learning from you, you know you were on our show and and our discussions, that the priorities are not always in line and not always where they necessarily should   Michael Hingson ** 43:39 be. Well. And again, there are reasons for it, and while I might not like it, I understand it, and that is, a lot of it is education, and a lot of it is is awareness. Most schools that teach people how to code to develop websites don't spend a lot of time dealing with accessibility, even though putting all the codes in and creating accessible websites is not a magically difficult thing to do, but it's an awareness issue. And so yeah, we're just going to have to continue to fight the fight and work toward getting people to be more aware of why it's necessary. And in reality, I do believe that there is a lot of truth to this fact that making things more accessible for me will help other people as well, because by having not well, voice input, certainly in a vehicle, but voice output and so on, and a way for me to accessibly, be able to input information into an autonomous vehicle to take to have it take me where I want to go, is only going to help everyone else as well. A lot of things that I need would benefit sighted people so well, so much.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 44:56 Yeah, you're exactly right. Yeah, AI assisted. And voice input and all those things, they are universally loved and accepted now, yeah,   Michael Hingson ** 45:07 it's getting better. The unemployment rate is still very high among, for example, employable blind people, because all too many people still think blind people can't work, even though they can. So it's all based on prejudice rather than reality, and we're, we're, we're just going to have to continue to work to try to deal with the issues. I wrote an article a couple of years ago. One of the things where we're constantly identified in the world is we're blind or visually impaired. And the problem with visually impaired is visually we're not different simply because we don't see and impaired, we are not we're getting people slowly to switch to blind and low vision, deaf people and hard of hearing people did that years ago. If you tell a deaf person they're hearing impaired, they're liable to deck you on the spot. Yeah, and blind people haven't progressed to that point, but it's getting there, and the reality is blind and low vision is a much more appropriate terminology to use, and it's not equating us to not having eyesight by saying we're impaired, you know. So it's it's an ongoing process, and all we can do is continue to work at it?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 46:21 Yeah, no. And I appreciate that you do. Like I said, education and retraining is, is call it marketing or call it, you know, just the way people should behave. But it's, that's, it's hard. It's one of the hardest things to do.   Michael Hingson ** 46:36 But, you know, we're making progress, and we'll, we'll continue to do that, and I think over time we'll we'll see things improve. It may not happen as quickly as we'd like, but I also believe that I and other people who are blind do need to be educators. We need to teach people. We need to be patient enough to do that. And you know, I see so often articles written about Me who talk about how my guide dog led me out of the World Trade Center. The guide dog doesn't lead anybody anywhere. That's not the job of the dog. The dog's job is to make sure that we walk safely. It's my job to know where to go and how to get there. So a guide dog guides and will make sure that we walk safely. But I'm the one that has to tell the dog, step by step, where I want the dog to go, and that story is really the crux of what I talk about many times when I travel and speak to talk to the public about what happened in the World Trade Center, because I spent a lot of time learning what I needed to do in order to escape safely and on September 11, not ever Having anticipated that we would need that kind of information, but still preparing for it, the mindset kicked in, and it all worked well.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 47:49 You You and I talked about Uber on on my show, when you came on, and we gave them a little ding and figured out some stuff for them, what in terms of accessibility, and, you know, just general corporate citizenship, what's what's a company that, let's give them a give, give, call them out for a good reason? What's a company that's doing a good job, in your eyes, in your mind, for accessibility, maybe an unexpected one.   Michael Hingson ** 48:20 Well, as I mentioned before, I think Apple is doing a lot of good things. I think Microsoft is doing some good I think they could do better than they are in in some ways, but they're working at it. I wish Google would put a little bit more emphasis on making its you its interface more more usable to you really use the like with Google Docs and so on. You have to hurt learn a whole lot of different commands to make part of that system work, rather than it being as straightforward as it should be, there's some new companies coming up. There's a new company called inno search. Inno search.ai, it was primarily designed at this point for blind and low vision people. The idea behind inner search is to have any a way of dealing with E commerce and getting people to be able to help get help shopping and so on. So they actually have a a phone number. It's, I think it's 855, shop, G, P, T, and you can go in, and you can talk to the bot and tell it what you want, and it can help fill up a shopping cart. It's using artificial intelligence, but it understands really well. I have yet to hear it tell me I don't understand what you want. Sometimes it gives me a lot of things that more than I than I'm searching for. So there, there's work that needs to be done, but in a search is really a very clever company that is spending a lot of time working to make. Sure that everything that it does to make a shopping experience enjoyable is also making sure that it's accessible.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 50:08 Oh, that's really interesting. Now, with with my podcast, and just in general, I spend a lot of time critiquing companies and and not taking them to test, but figuring out how to make them better. But I always like the opportunity to say you did something well, like even quietly, or you're, you know, people are finding you because of a certain something you didn't you took it upon yourselves to do and figure out   Michael Hingson ** 50:34 there's an audio editor, and we use it some unstoppable mindset called Reaper. And Reaper is a really great digital audio workstation product. And there is a whole series of scripts that have been written that make Reaper incredibly accessible as an audio editing tool. It's really great. It's about one of the most accessible products that I think I have seen is because they've done so well with it, which is kind of cool.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 51:06 Oh, very nice. Okay, good. It's not even expensive. You gave me two to look, to pay attention to, and, you know, Track, track, along with,   Michael Hingson ** 51:16 yeah, they're, they're, they're fun. So what do people assume about you that isn't true or that you don't think is true?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 51:25 People say, I'm quiet at times, guess going back to childhood, but there's time, there's situation. It's it's situational. There's times where I don't have to be the loudest person in the room or or be the one to talk the most, I can hang back and observe, but I would not categorize myself as quiet, you know, like I said, it's environmental. But now I've got plenty to say. You just have to engage me, I guess.   Michael Hingson ** 51:56 Yeah, well, you know, it's interesting. I'm trying to remember   Michael Hingson ** 52:04 on Shark Tank, what's Mark's last name, Cuban. Cuban. It's interesting to watch Mark on Shark Tank. I don't know whether he's really a quiet person normally, but I see when I watch Shark Tank. The other guys, like Mr. Wonderful with Kevin are talking all the time, and Mark just sits back and doesn't say anything for the longest period of time, and then he drops a bomb and bids and wins. Right? He's just really clever about the way he does it. I think there's a lot to be said for not just having to speak up every single time, but rather really thinking things through. And he clearly does that,   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 52:46 yeah, yeah, you have to appreciate that. And I think that's part of the reason that you know, when I came time to do a podcast, I did a panel show, because I'm surrounded by bright, interesting, articulate people, you included as coming on with us and and I don't have to fill every second. I can, I can, I, you know, I can intake information and think for a second and then maybe have a   Michael Hingson ** 53:15 response. Well, I think that makes a lot of sense, doesn't it? I mean, it's the way it really ought to be.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 53:20 Yeah, if you got to fill an hour by yourself, you're always on, right?   Michael Hingson ** 53:26 Yeah, I know exactly what you mean. I know when I travel to speak. I figure that when I land somewhere, I'm on until I leave again. So I always enjoy reading books, especially going and coming on airplanes. And then I can be on the whole time. I am wherever I have to be, and then when I get on the airplane to come home, I can relax again.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 53:45 Now, I like that. And I know, you keynote, I think I'd rather moderate, you know, I'll say something when I have something to say, and let other people talk for a while. Well, you gotta, you have a great story, and you're, you know, I'm glad you're getting it out there.   Michael Hingson ** 53:58 Well, if anybody needs a keynote speaker. Just saying, for everybody listening, feel free to email me. I'd love to hear from you. You can email me at Michael H i@accessibe.com or speaker at Michael hingson.com always looking for speaking engagements. Then we got that one in. I'm glad, but, but you know, for you, is there a podcast episode that you haven't done, that you really want to do, that just seems to be eluding you?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 54:28 There are a couple that got away. I wanted to do one about Sesame Street because it was without a it was looking like it was going to be without a home. And that's such a hallmark of my childhood. And so many, yeah, I think they worked out a deal, which is probably what I was going to propose with. It's like a CO production deal with Netflix. So it seems like they're safe for the foreseeable future. But what was the other I think there's, there's at least one or two more where maybe the guests didn't line up, or. Or the timeliness didn't work. I was going to have someone connected to Big Lots. You remember Big Lots? I think they're still around to some degree, but I think they are, come on and tell me their story, because they've, you know, they've been on the brink of extinction for a little while. So it's usually, it's either a timing thing, with the with with the guest, or the news cycle has just maybe gone on and moved past us.   Michael Hingson ** 55:28 But, yeah, I know people wrote off Red Lobster for a while, but they're still around.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 55:35 They're still around. That would be a good one. Yeah, their endless shrimp didn't do them any favors. No, that didn't help a whole lot, but it's the companies, even the ones we've done already, you know, they they're still six months later. Toilet hasn't been even a full year of our show yet, but in a year, I bet there's, you know, we could revisit them all over again, and they're still going to find themselves in, I don't know, hot water, but some kind of controversy for one reason or another. And we'll, we'll try to help them out again.   Michael Hingson ** 56:06 Have you seen any successes from the podcast episodes where a company did listen to you and has made some changes?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 56:15 I don't know that. I can correlate one to one. We know that they listen. We can look at the metrics and where the where the list listens, are coming from, especially with LinkedIn, gives you some engagement and tells you which companies are paying attention. So we know that they are and they have now, whether they took that and, you know, implemented it, we have a disclaimer saying, Don't do it. You know, we're not there to give you unfiltered legal advice. You know, don't hold us accountable for anything we say. But if we said something good and you like it, do it. So, you know, I don't know to a T if they have then we probably given away billions of dollars worth of fixes. But, you know, I don't know the correlation between those who have listened and those who have acted on something that we might have, you know, alluded to or set out, right? But it has. We've been the times that we take it really seriously. We've we've predicted some things that have come come to pass.   Michael Hingson ** 57:13 That's cool, yeah. Well, you certainly had a great career, and you've done a lot of interesting things. If you had to suddenly change careers and do something entirely different from what you're doing, what would it be?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 57:26 Oh, man, my family laughs at me, but I think it would be a furniture salesman. There you go. Yeah, I don't know why. There's something about it's just enough repetition and just enough creativity. I guess, where people come in, you tell them, you know you, they tell you their story, you know, you get to know them. And then you say, Oh, well, this sofa would be amazing, you know, and not, not one with endless varieties, not one with with two models somewhere in between. Yeah, I think that would be it keeps you on your feet.   Michael Hingson ** 58:05 Furniture salesman, well, if you, you know, if you get too bored, math is homes and Bob's furniture probably looking for people.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 58:12 Yeah, I could probably do that at night.   Michael Hingson ** 58:18 What advice do you give to people who are just starting out, or what kinds of things do you would you give to people we have ideas and thoughts?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 58:27 So I've done a lot of mentoring. I've done a lot of one on one calls. They told I always work with an organization. They told me I did 100 plus calls. I always tell people to take use the create their own momentum, so you can apply for things, you can stand in line, you can wait, or you can come up with your own idea and test it out and say, I'm doing this. Who wants in? And the minute you have an idea, people are interested. You know, you're on to something. Let me see what that's all about. You know, I want to be one of the three that you're looking for. So I tell them, create their own momentum. Try to flip the power dynamic. So if you're asking for a job, how do you get the person that you're asking to want something from you and and do things that are take on, things that are within your control?   Michael Hingson ** 59:18 Right? Right? Well, if you had to go back and tell the younger Aaron something from years ago, what would you give him in the way of advice?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 59:30 Be more vulnerable. Don't pretend you know everything. There you go. And you don't need to know everything. You need to know what you know. And then get a little better and get a little better.   Michael Hingson ** 59:43 One of the things that I constantly tell people who I hire as salespeople is you can be a student, at least for a year. Don't hesitate to ask your customers questions because they're not out to. Get you. They want you to succeed. And if you interact with your customers and you're willing to learn from them, they're willing to teach, and you'll learn so much that you never would have thought you would learn. I just think that's such a great concept.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 1:00:12 Oh, exactly right. Yeah. As soon as I started saying that to clients, you know, they would throw out an industry term. As soon as I've said I don't know what that is, can you explain it to me? Yeah? And they did, and the world didn't fall apart. And I didn't, you know, didn't look like the idiot that I thought I would when we went on with our day. Yeah, that whole protective barrier that I worked so hard to keep up as a facade, I didn't have to do it, and it was so freeing. Yeah, yeah, yeah,   Michael Hingson ** 1:00:41 I hear you. Well, this has been fun. We've been doing it for an hour. Can you believe it? Oh, hey, that was a quick hour. I know it was a lot of fun. Well, I want to thank you for being here, and I want to thank you all for listening. Please give us a five star rating wherever you're listening or watching. We really appreciate it. We value your thoughts. I'd love to hear from you and get your thoughts on our episode today. And I'm sure Aaron would like that as well, and I'll give you an email address in a moment. But Aaron, if people want to reach out to you and maybe use your services, how do they do that?   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 1:01:12 Yeah, so two ways you can check me out, at double zebra, z, E, B, R, A, double zebra.com and the podcast, I encourage you to check out too. We fixed it. Pod.com, we fixed it.   Michael Hingson ** 1:01:25 Pod.com, there you go. So reach out to Aaron and get marketing stuff done and again. Thank you all. My email address, if you'd like to talk to us, is Michael, H, I m, I C, H, A, E, L, H, I at accessibe, A, C, C, E, S, S, i, b, e.com, and if you know anyone else who you think ought to be a guest on our podcast, we'd love it if you give us an introduction. We're always looking for people, so please do and again. Aaron, I just want to thank you for being here. This has been a lot of fun.   Aaron Wolpoff, ** 1:01:58 That was great. Thanks for having me. Michael,   **Michael Hingson ** 1:02:05 You have been listening to the Unstoppable Mindset podcast. Thanks for dropping by. I hope that you'll join us again next week, and in future weeks for upcoming episodes. To subscribe to our podcast and to learn about upcoming episodes, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com slash podcast. Michael Hingson is spelled m i c h a e l h i n g s o n. While you're on the site., please use the form there to recommend people who we ought to interview in upcoming editions of the show. And also, we ask you and urge you to invite your friends to join us in the future. If you know of any one or any organization needing a speaker for an event, please email me at speaker at Michael hingson.com. I appreciate it very much. To learn more about the concept of blinded by fear, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com forward slash blinded by fear and while you're there, feel free to pick up a copy of my free eBook entitled blinded by fear. The unstoppable mindset podcast is provided by access cast an initiative of accessiBe and is sponsored by accessiBe. Please visit www.accessibe.com . AccessiBe is spelled a c c e s s i b e. There you can learn all about how you can make your website inclusive for all persons with disabilities and how you can help make the internet fully inclusive by 2025. Thanks again for Listening. Please come back and visit us again next week.

Judgment Awaits
Episode 28 - Come On, Princess!

Judgment Awaits

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2025 41:01


Today on Judgment Awaits: Grape wants Ash to come out to play, Inno ships real people, and Ash coughs. A lot.Email us your questions, comments, and theories at ⁠⁠⁠⁠judgmentawaitspodcast@gmail.com⁠⁠⁠⁠ Follow us on Twitter and Bluesky and read the episode transcripts at ⁠⁠⁠⁠@j_awaitspodcast⁠⁠⁠ and ⁠⁠@j-awaitspodcast

The Aubrey Masango Show
Profile Interview: A sit down with Inno Motau, President of Young Entrepreneur South Africa (YESA) & Director at MSC Mediterranean Shipping Company

The Aubrey Masango Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2025 43:24 Transcription Available


Aubrey Masango speaks to Inno Motau, President of Young Entrepreneur South Africa (YESA) & Director at MSC Mediterranean Shipping Company who shares insights on her upbringing and how it has shaped the business leader she has become. They also share some anecdotes on growing up in Mamelodi and reflect on their shared experiences.Tags: 702, The Aubrey Masango Show, Aubrey Masango, Profile , Inno Motau, MSC, Shipping, Youth, Leadership, Women, Mamelodi. Pretoria, Business, Entrepreneurship The Aubrey Masango Show is presented by late night radio broadcaster Aubrey Masango. Aubrey hosts in-depth interviews on controversial political issues and chats to experts offering life advice and guidance in areas of psychology, personal finance and more. All Aubrey’s interviews are podcasted for you to catch-up and listen. Thank you for listening to this podcast from The Aubrey Masango Show. Listen live on weekdays between 20:00 and 24:00 (SA Time) to The Aubrey Masango Show broadcast on 702 https://buff.ly/gk3y0Kj and on CapeTalk between 20:00 and 21:00 (SA Time) https://buff.ly/NnFM3Nk Find out more about the show here https://buff.ly/lzyKCv0 and get all the catch-up podcasts https://buff.ly/rT6znsn Subscribe to the 702 and CapeTalk Daily and Weekly Newsletters https://buff.ly/v5mfet Follow us on social media: 702 on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TalkRadio702 702 on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@talkradio702 702 on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/talkradio702/ 702 on X: https://x.com/Radio702 702 on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@radio702 CapeTalk on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CapeTalk CapeTalk on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@capetalk CapeTalk on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ CapeTalk on X: https://x.com/CapeTalk CapeTalk on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@CapeTalk567 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Good Banter with Tom Siegert and Evan Hocking
#235 - Goran Inno-Vin-O-Vich

Good Banter with Tom Siegert and Evan Hocking

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2025 59:30


Timmy gives us a Goran Inno-Vin-O-Vich update. His boys have discovered about drawing dicks on things and Ivan has an issue in the retirement village. Sit back, relax and enjoy some "Good Banter" Jump on the Patreon - www.patreon.com/goodbanter

On The Verge
// SPECIAL //

On The Verge

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2025 22:43


Après les premières fois et les souvenirs parfois chaotiques que l'on a partagé dans l'épisode 1, on passe à l'étape suivante : quand le geste devient fluide, à deux.Dans cet épisode, avec Benjamin, François et Martin, on parle de ressenti, de communication, d'adaptation, et de ce qui change quand on prend le temps d'explorer à deux… On teste aussi le préservatif Inno de SKYN, et on débriefe en toute transparence.

VCA Voice: A Veterinary Podcast
Advancements in Veterinary Orthopedic Surgery: Dr. Jose Carvajal

VCA Voice: A Veterinary Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2025 27:13


Send us a textIn this episode of the VCA Voice Podcast, Dr. Jose Carvajal shares his journey in veterinary medicine, detailing his experiences from veterinary school to becoming a surgical specialist. Dr. Kerl and Dr. Carvajal discuss the rigorous training involved in surgical residency, the importance of mentorship, and his specialization in joint replacement surgery. Dr. Carvajal also highlights the challenges and rewards of being a surgeon, the innovations in veterinary surgery, particularly the role of 3D printing in orthopedic procedures, and the collaborative efforts to improve surgical outcomes for pets. He highlights the advancements in joint replacement surgeries, especially hip replacements, and contrasts them with the challenges faced in other joint surgeries. Jose also shares his journey towards specialization in joint replacement surgery and emphasizes the importance of fostering innovation and curiosity in veterinary medicine to improve patient care.After receiving his Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree at the University of Florida in 2017, Dr. Carvajal completed a small animal rotating internship at VCA NWVS. He then returned to his alma mater for a small animal surgical residency. Following completion of the surgical residency, he stayed at UF as a Clinical Professor of Small Animal Orthopedics and became the first fellowship trained ACVS Joint Replacement Surgery Fellow prior to moving back to the Pacific Northwest to join the team at VCA NWVS.Dr. Carvajal enjoys all aspects of orthopedic surgery, with special interest and expertise in total joint replacement surgery, custom 3-D printed angular limb deformity correction surgery, and minimally invasive fracture repair and arthroscopic surgery.  Visit our website: vcavoice.comAll episodes produced by dādy creative

HORECA AUDIO NEWS - Le pillole quotidiane
10.201 - Maison Taittinger presenta il ''Table Polychrome'': un inno sinestetico all'arte dell'assemblaggio, tra haute cuisine, Champagne..

HORECA AUDIO NEWS - Le pillole quotidiane

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2025 4:37


Immaginate un luogo in cui la degustazione non è soltanto un atto ma un rito condiviso, un'esperienza sinestetica in cui la materia prima si trasforma in emozione, il colore diventa sapore e ogni gesto si carica di significato. 

Yoga con Denise Podcast
340. Silent Yoga Party – Il mio inno alla libertà attraverso il movimento

Yoga con Denise Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2025 11:35


Un'esperienza nata dal desiderio profondo di libertà, di movimento autentico, di gioia condivisa. In questa puntata ti porto con me dietro le quinte di questa pratica unica, ispirata da sessioni urbane di danza, tecniche di ascolto del corpo, musica nelle cuffie e cuori aperti. Ps. Ecco alcuni link utili: Accedi alla community di Yogi gratuita

MAX Health and Fitness Recordings
Exercise…Fat, Tired, Unfit, Unhealthy…The fastest way to change...with Rowie McEvoy

MAX Health and Fitness Recordings

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2025 7:24


Fat, Tired, Unfit, Unhealthy…The fastest way to change? Can we be healthy, fit, strong, and lean for life? If yes- HOW? In NO- what are the consequences/risks? www.maxfitnesscollege.com

Ciao! Leggo la Bibbia
301- Inno alla gioia

Ciao! Leggo la Bibbia

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 4:27


fine di questo libretto stupendo Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Start Up Podcast PH
Start Up #219 (LIVE): INNO Digital Marketing - Market Insights and Digital Solutions for MSMEs

Start Up Podcast PH

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2025 53:13


Mike Natividad is Founder at INNO Digital Marketing. INNO Digital Marketing is providing market research and digital marketing solutions for micro, small, and medium enterprises. They do this by providing market insights, especially helpful for enterprises penetrating local markets, and executing a marketing strategy that includes social media management, ads creation, and leads generation.This episode is recorded live at ISAT U KWADRA TBI. ISAT U KWADRA TBI is a startup incubator based in Iloilo Science and Technology University, Iloilo City.In this episode | 00:54 Ano ang INNO Digital Marketing? | 04:22 What problem is being solved? | 13:04 What solution is being provided? | 24:00 What are stories behind the startup? | 47:40 What is the vision? | 50:42 How can listeners find more information?INNO DIGITAL MARKETING | Website: https://www.innodigitalmarketing.com | Facebook: https://facebook.com/InnoDigitalMarketingServicesISAT U KWADRA TBI | Website: https://kwadratbi.tech | Facebook: https://facebook.com/KwadraTBITHIS EPISODE IS CO-PRODUCED BY:SPROUT SOLUTIONS | Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://sprout.ph⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Sprout Payroll Starter: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/SproutPayrollStarter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠APEIRON | Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://apeirongrp.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://facebook.com/apeirongrp⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠TWALA | Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://twala.io⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://facebook.com/twalaio⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠SYMPH | Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://symph.co⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://facebook.com/SymphCo⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠MAROON STUDIOS | Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://maroonstudios.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://facebook.com/maroonstudiosinc⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠AIMHI | Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://aimhi.ai⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://facebook.com/aimhiconstruction⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠CHECK OUT OUR PARTNERS | Ask Lex PH Academy: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://asklexph.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ (5% discount on e-learning courses! Code: ALPHAXSUP) | Founders Launchpad: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://founderslaunchpad.vc⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | CloudCFO: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://cloudcfo.ph⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ (Free financial assessment, process onboarding, and 6-month QuickBooks subscription! Mention: Start Up Podcast PH) | Cloverly.tech: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://cloverly.tech⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | BuddyBetes: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://buddybetes.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | HKB Digital Services: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://contakt-ph.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ (10% discount on RFID Business Cards! Code: CONTAKTXSUP) | Hyperstacks: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://hyperstacksinc.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | OneCFO: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://onecfoph.co⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ (10% discount on CFO services! Code: ONECFOXSUP) | UNAWA: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://unawa.asia⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | SkoolTek: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://skooltek.co⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Better Support: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bettersupport.io⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ (Referral fee for anyone who can bring in new BPO clients!) | Britana: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://britanaerp.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Wunderbrand: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://wunderbrand.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Fail Coach: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://fail.coach⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Drive Manila: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://facebook.com/drivemanilaph⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | EastPoint Business Outsourcing Services: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://facebook.com/eastpointoutsourcing⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Doon: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://doon.ph⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Hier Business Solutions: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://hierpayroll.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | DVCode Technologies: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://dvcode.tech⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Mata Technologies: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://mata.ph⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | LookingFour Buy & Sell Online: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://lookingfour.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | NutriCoach: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://nutricoach.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Uplift Code Camp: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://upliftcodecamp.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ (5% discount on bootcamps and courses! Code: UPLIFTSTARTUPPH) | Digest PH: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://digest.ph⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ (10% discount on legal services! Code: DIGESTXSUP)START UP PODCAST PH | YouTube: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://youtube.com/startuppodcastph⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Spotify: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://open.spotify.com/show/6BObuPvMfoZzdlJeb1XXVa⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Apple Podcasts: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/start-up-podcast/id1576462394⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://facebook.com/startuppodcastph⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Patreon: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://patreon.com/StartUpPodcastPH⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ | Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://phstartup.online⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠This episode is edited by the team at: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://tasharivera.com

TshisaLIVE
Innocent “Inno” Matijane opens up about his transition and return to reality TV

TshisaLIVE

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2025 37:23


In 2023, reality TV star and DJ Innocent 'Inno' Matijane embarked on a journey of transitioning to become a woman. Now, in 2025, Inno has returned to using he/him pronouns. In this candid conversation with TshisaLIVE, he opens up about his personal journey and what lies ahead, including his return to Moja Love's The Way Ngingakhona. TshisaLIVE

Ultim'ora
Alma Manera "'Tutto il tempo che vuoi' un inno all'amore vero"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 1:26


ROMA (ITALPRESS) - "Tutto il tempo che vuoi è una nuova avventura che condivido con un giovane e talentuoso artista, Giovanni Segreti Bruno, che firma la musica ed insieme abbiamo collaborato per la scrittura del testo con Maria Pia Liotta. Una dedica all'amore autentico". A dirlo è Alma Manera, a margine della presentazione di "Tutto il tempo che vuoi", il suo nuovo singolo.sat/mca2

lo spaghettino
scusabea/inno

lo spaghettino

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 7:53


Cambiamolo! La prima clip dall'Allianz Arena è tratta da video.gazzetta.it all rights reserved. La seconda, dove Ennio Morricone dirige il concerto di Venezia del 10 novembre 2007, è tratta dal canale YouTube di SELF distribuzione all rights reserved

SBS Italian - SBS in Italiano
Carlo Forlivesi, in tour in Australia, presenta a Melbourne un inno dedicato a Carlo Acutis

SBS Italian - SBS in Italiano

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2025 12:05


Il compositore e organista Carlo Forlivesi è in Australia per una serie di concerti. L'abbiamo intervistato a poche ore dal suo primo concerto alla St Paul's Cathedral di Melbourne.

Sentenze
Controlli fiscali e un inno alla CEDU

Sentenze

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2025 29:17


Fino a che punto si possono spingere le autorità nei controlli fiscali? Una recente sentenza della Corte europea dei diritti dell'uomo (CEDU) si è occupata dei diritti dei contribuenti italiani nei confronti delle attività di controllo di Agenzia delle Entrate e Guardia di finanza.“Sentenze” è un podcast di Pagella Politica e Facta, scritto e prodotto da Giovanni Gasparini, avvocato, e Giovanni Zagni, giornalista e direttore dei due progetti di fact-checking.Puoi sostenere Pagella Politica a questo indirizzo: https://pagellapolitica.it/sostienipagellaDai un'occhiata al nostro nuovo progetto, Dora: https://dora.facta.news/La musica è Hall of the Mountain King di Kevin MacLeod • Edvard Grieg | http://incompetech.comMusic promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.comCreative Commons / Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Atualpa - Palestra Pública
Desencarnando com ou sem perturbação - palestra: 13/02/2025

Atualpa - Palestra Pública

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2025 54:07


Ângelis, Joanna de (Espírito). Vida no além-túmulo – perturbação espiritual. In: No limiar do Infinito. Psicografia de Divaldo P. Franco. Salvador: LEAL, 1977. cap. 13, p. 101-106. Obras básicas e complementares da Doutrina Espírita. (live no YouTube). Palestrante: Eduardo Fávero

Ultim'ora
Sanremo, Coma Cose "La nostra Cuoricini inno alla vita offline"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2025 2:18


SANREMO (IMPERIA) (ITALPRESS) - I Coma Cose tornano sul palco dell'Ariston per la loro terza partecipazione al Festival di Sanremo con Cuoricini, una ballad intima che parla di dinamiche di coppia, di amore quotidiano e di un presente sempre più connesso. Dopo Fiamme negli occhi (2021) e L'addio (2023), il duo composto da California e Fausto Lama porta un brano che unisce sonorità new wave anni '80 a un testo che riflette sulla società digitale e sull'importanza di vivere il momento. “Abbiamo cercato tanto questa canzone, ne abbiamo scartate almeno cinque prima di arrivare a Cuoricini” raccontano i Coma Cose. “Siamo partiti da un suono che ci piaceva, e poi la canzone è venuta fuori in pochi giorni. Sentiamo molto il tema che affronta: i social fanno parte della nostra vita, portano cose belle, ma a volte ci si ritrova a scrollare il nulla. Cuoricini è un inno a vivere il presente, senza paura del giudizio degli altri”. La coppia, nella vita e nella musica, esplora in questo pezzo l'amore nella sua dimensione più autentica e quotidiana, con le sue sfumature dolci e amare. “Parla di amore, ma in una versione agrodolce, quella della convivenza di tutti i giorni. È una sorta di favola distopica della contemporaneità” spiegano.xp2/tvi/gtr

Guns and Mental Health by Walk the Talk America
Ep 137: Kenny Barlow Recaps National Research Conference for the Prevention of Firearm-Related Harms

Guns and Mental Health by Walk the Talk America

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2025 78:14


In this episode of the Guns and Mental Health podcast, host Michael Sodini and Kenny Barlow discuss their experiences at the National Research Conference for the Prevention of Firearms-Related Harms. They explore the diverse perspectives on firearm research, the importance of technology in gun safety, and the challenges faced in the field. The conversation emphasizes the need for education and awareness to address misconceptions surrounding firearms and mental health while also highlighting innovative solutions for improving gun safety practices. In this conversation, Kenny Barlow and Michael Sodini discuss the challenges and nuances surrounding gun policy, mainly focusing on outdated data, reliable research, and the role of anecdotal evidence in shaping perceptions of firearm safety. They emphasize the need for credible messengers in the gun rights conversation and explore innovative solutions for gun storage and safety. The discussion highlights the importance of building trust within the community and the necessity of supporting research that accurately reflects the realities of gun ownership and mental health.Send us a text

Chess After Dark
#218 Jón Ásgeir Jóhannesson

Chess After Dark

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2025 124:10


Gestur Chess After Dark í kvöld er Jón Ásgeir Jóhannesson stjórnarformaður og eigandi SKEL fjárfestingafélags.Umræðuefni í þættinum:Heimkaup samstæðan.Prís.Samkaup.INNO.ESA húsleit.Samkeppniseftirlitið.Erlendir fjárfestar.Íslenskir fjárfestar.Orkuskipti á Íslandi.Beefið við Davíð Oddsson.Riddaraspurningar.Hraðaspurningar.Njótið vel kæru hlustendur.Þessi þáttur er í boði:Autocenter.Serrano.Orka Náttúrunnar.Dokobit.PLAY.TM.Kontakt fyrirtækjaráðgjöf.Lengjan.Suit Up.Búllan.Budvar.Subway.Dave&Jons.Frumherji.KEMI.Bónus.

Moon Safari
S11P12 - Le poesie di Catherine Pozzi e la musica di Moon Safari

Moon Safari

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2025 14:10


La dodicesima puntata dell'undicesima stagione del podcast di Moon Safari offre all'ascolto l'unione tra le nostre esplorazioni musicali al chiaro di luna e la lettura di due poesie di Catherine Pozzi.PLAYLIST POETICACatherine Pozzi - NyxO mie notti, o nere attese,o audace paese, o segreti ostinati,o lunghi sguardi, o lampeggianti nubi,o volo dato oltre gl'impenetrabili cieli. O gran desiderio, o sparsa meravigliao bel paesaggio dell'incantato spiritoo male peggiore, o scesa graziao schiusa porta da nessuno mai varcata Non so perché muoio e annegoprima d'entrare nell'eterna sosta.Non so di chi sono la preda,non so di chi sono l'amore.Catherine Pozzi - Quasi addioIl grande amore che mi hai datoIl vento dei giorni l'ha mandato in frantumi ‒Dove fu la fiamma, dove fu il destino,Dove eravamo, dove per mano strettaNoi stavamo Il nostro sole, il cui ardore era pensatoIl mondo per noi di essere senza un secondoIl secondo cielo di un'anima divisaDoppio esilio dove il doppio si fondeIl suo luogo per te appare cenere e paura,I tuoi occhi verso di lui non l'hanno riconosciutoLa stella incantata che sviava lo sguardoL'estremo istante del nostro unico abbraccioVerso l'ignoto. Ma il futuro che ti aspetti di vivereÈ meno presente del bene scomparso.Qualsiasi raccolto che alla fine ti portaLo berrai senza poter essere così ubriacoDel vino perso.Io ho ritrovato il celeste e selvaggioIl paradiso dove l'angoscia è desiderio.L'altisonante passato che cresce di età in etàÈ il mio corpo e sarà il mio sensoDopo la morte. Quando in un corpo la mia gioia dimenticataDove fu il tuo nome, prenderà la forma del cuoreIo rivivrò il nostro grande giorno,E questo amore che ti ho datoPer il dolore.(dalla raccolta "Catherine Pozzi, Nyx e altre poesie")Catherine Pozzi, Amo colui che non saAmo colui che non sadove condurre i suoi passi;destino, non fareche un vento lo porti ov'io non sono,ti supplico –Attribuisci fortuna e sfortunaa questo dormiente in egual misura,così che finisca sul cuoredella sua amica.(Traduzione di Claudia CiardiPoesia n. 301 Febbraio 2015. "Catherine Pozzi. Inno alla notte"a cura di Claudia Ciardi)PLAYLIST MUSICALE >> https://open.spotify.com/playlist/3c3DnZU8p2Hfw5tR0qoTix?si=pax7D5J4S1K9ZxTA0TSVxg&pi=5sCn-nqITKax8Jungle - CherryUji - Oropo— Lettura di Catherine Pozzi - NyxSevdaliza - That Other Girl Sevdaliza - Woman Life Freedom— Lettura di Catherine Pozzi - Amo colui che non sa RAMZi - Fly to me RAMZi - Afloat (ft. NAP) Salamanda - Aiya Koralle & KeepVibesNear - If I Had A Diary Koralle & Flofilz - Blunotte -- Lettura di Catherine Pozzi - Quasi addio Casino Royale, Sara Berts - Infinite Tug404 - Uman ThermaAndi Otto & Ced Benglez - Massive Virus Peak (remix)Whitemary - Presets / Doing anything 

Les enfants de choeur

Ce dimanche 26 janvier, Michaël Pachen et son équipe partent à votre rencontre à Wavre, à l'Espace Columban. L'humoriste belge Inno JP est l'invité de cette émission, plus que prêt à subir les Enfants de choeur ! Merci pour votre écoute Les Enfants de Choeurs, c'est également en direct tous les matins de la semaine vers 8h15 sur www.rtbf.be/vivacité Retrouvez tous les épisodes des Enfants de Choeur sur notre plateforme Auvio.be https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/les-enfants-de-ch-ur-19357 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.

Atualpa - Palestra Pública
Desencarnação de pessoas amadas - palestra: 20/01/2025

Atualpa - Palestra Pública

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2025 59:10


Ângelis, Joanna de (Espírito). Desencarnação - perda de pessoas amadas. In: No limiar do Infinito. Psicografia de Divaldo P. Franco. Salvador: LEAL, 1977. cap. 11, p. 87-92.Obras básicas e complementares da Doutrina Espírita. (live no YouTube). Palestrante: Wagner Oliveira

Circo Massimo - Lo spettacolo della politica
Cecilia libera, un inno al giornalismo e un successo di Meloni

Circo Massimo - Lo spettacolo della politica

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2025 9:07


Massimo Giannini, editorialista e opinionista di Repubblica, racconta dal lunedì al venerdì il suo punto di vista sullo scenario politico e sulle notizie di attualità, italiane e internazionali. “Circo Massimo - Lo spettacolo della politica“ lo puoi ascoltare sull’app di One Podcast, sull’app di Repubblica, e su tutte le principali piattaforme.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Zuppa di Porro
Grillo mi fa orrore. Ma Conte è un inno all'ipocrisia

Zuppa di Porro

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 14:00


Zuppa di Porro 25 novembre 2024: rassegna stampa quotidiana

Grandes ciclos
Grandes ciclos - G. Puccini (IX): Soy yo quien tiene razón - 21/11/24

Grandes ciclos

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2024 59:47


PUCCINI: La Bohème, Ópera en cuatro actos (Acto IV) (27.49). M. Freni (sop.), H. Gueden (sop.), G. Raimondi (ten.), G. Taddei (bar.), R. Panerai (bar.), I. Vinco (baj.), Coro y Orq. de la Staasoper de Viena. Dir.: H. von Karajan. Crisantemi (6.52) Cuarteto Modigliani. Inno a Roma S. 90 (3.18). L. Tamminga (órg.), V. Marrè (perc.), M. Natalizi (perc.).Escuchar audio

Physics World Weekly Podcast
Data-intensive PhDs at LIV.INNO prepare students for careers outside of academia

Physics World Weekly Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2024 36:50 Transcription Available


This podcast is sponsored by LIV.INNO, the Liverpool Centre for Doctoral Training for Innovation in Data-Intensive Science

Bonk Bros
Dylan's Quitting YouTube. Dizzle's Retiring from Crits. What Next, Discontinuing the Conti Race King?!

Bonk Bros

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2024 75:45


EPISODE 109 - Dylan's Quitting YouTube. Dizzle's Retiring from Crits. What Next, Discontinuing the Conti Race King?! What up party people. First off, just wanted to give a big shout to all the folks who came up to me at Nepomuk Narly this past weekend to mention your loyalty to the show, interactions like that are truly what drives us (well at least me anyway) to keep this thing running week after week. Speaking of Nepomuk Narly, if you weren't at the biggest little gravel race in Pisek, ND this past weekend then you definitely missed out on a good time. Not only did they manage to recruit even more big names to show up this year including reigning champ Adam Roberge, Ted and Laura King, the Minnesota hit squad of Inno and Chase, and a bunch of other fast riders from all over, they also just know how to bring the Midwest hospitality in such a unique way. From games and activities for all ages, race distances for anyone and everyone, the kindest host families you can ever imagine, and for the tip of the spear, one heck of a prize purse to boot. So put it on your calendars for next year, July 19th coming in hot. And no, this is not a paid advertisement, I just love this race to death and want y'all to experience the Nepomuk charm as well. Okay so for the show this week, basically Drew drank way too much coffee and brought us on tangents galore the whole episode so you'll just have to hang tight to find out what we really talk about.  Bonk Bros is brought to you each and every week by our proud sponsors. Check out the marginal gains offerings from Silca including their top of the line bike wash product to give your ride the pampering it deserves (code bonkbrosbikewash for 15% off), Dynamic Cyclist and their strength and mobility plans to keep you nimble and sharp on and off the bike (code BONKBROS for 10% off), and our friends from Bolt Skin and Shave who are taking leg shaving for men to new heights with their one of a kind Performance Razor (code BONKBROS15 for 15% off). If you have any questions or feedback for the show you can drop us a note at bonkbrospodcast@gmail.com or slide your way into those Bonk Bros instagram DMs (@bonkbros @dylanjawnson @adamsaban6 @tylerclouti @raddaddizzle @scottmcgilljr). Alright let's get this episode started.   Patreon: http://patreon.com/patreon_bonkbros   Silca (15% discount code: bonkbrosbikewash): https://silca.cc/?utm_source=Bonk+Bros&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=stripchip&utm_id=Bonk+Bros+Podcast Dynamic Cyclist (10% discount code: BONKBROS): https://new.dynamiccyclist.com/a/43703/xkYViFV8 BOLT (15% discount code: BONKBROS15): BOLT Skin + Shaveboltshave.com   For more Dylan Johnson content: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIf1xvRN8pzyd_VfLgj_dow Intro/ Outro music by AlexGrohl on Pixabay.com: https://pixabay.com/music/id-111445/  Listener Question Form: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1T37wGRLk6iYTCF6X_DQ9yfcaYtfAQceKpBJYR5W7DVA/edit?ts=642eb6d6   The Following Was Generated Using AI And Should Not Be Held To The Higher Standards Of Sentient Beings - Riverside.fm   Summary The conversation starts with a discussion about clickbait on YouTube and the reactions it generates. They then transition to talking about tires and Dylan's extensive knowledge in that area. The conversation shifts to Dylan's decision to quit crit racing and focus on gravel racing instead. They discuss Pogacar's dominance in cycling and the controversy surrounding his performance. The conversation ends with a debate about the pronunciation of Pogacar's name and his potential future success in Grand Tours. The conversation covers various topics including the potential for Tadej Pogacar to break the Tour de France stage win record, the performance of other riders like Mathieu van der Poel and Wout van Aert, and the upcoming Olympics and World Championships. The hosts also discuss the aesthetics of a thumbnail image and express their preferences for certain riders. In this part of the conversation, the hosts discuss their predictions for the upcoming mountain bike World Cup. They mention various riders and their chances of winning. They also talk about the use of carbon monoxide for altitude training and the controversy surrounding it. The conversation then shifts to the topic of national championships and the idea of creating new categories. They also discuss the use of arrow bars in gravel racing and the safety concerns associated with them. In this final part of the conversation, the hosts discuss their equipment choices for racing and share their experiences. They talk about the benefits of integrated arrow bars, the debate over tire size, and the performance of different tires. They also touch on the topic of VO2 max testing and the possibility of a showdown between the hosts. The conversation ends with some banter about their racing results and future plans.   Keywords YouTube, clickbait, tires, clickbait thumbnails, quitting YouTube, crit racing, gravel racing, Pogacar, dominance, controversy, pronunciation, future success, Tadej Pogacar, Tour de France, stage win record, Mathieu van der Poel, Wout van Aert, Olympics, World Championships, thumbnail image, rider preferences, mountain bike, World Cup, predictions, carbon monoxide, altitude training, national championships, arrow bars, gravel racing, equipment choices, integrated arrow bars, tire size, tire performance, VO2 max testing, racing results   Takeaways Clickbait is a common strategy on YouTube, and while some viewers may be upset by it, it still generates views and engagement. Dylan has extensive knowledge about tires and is known for his expertise in the cycling community. Dylan has decided to quit crit racing and focus on gravel racing instead. Pogacar's dominance in cycling has raised questions and controversy, but his performance and potential future success are still impressive. There is debate about the pronunciation of Pogacar's name, with different commentators and fans using different pronunciations. Tadej Pogacar has the potential to break the Tour de France stage win record if he continues to win at his current rate. Mathieu van der Poel and Wout van Aert are discussed as potential contenders in future races. The hosts express their preferences for certain riders and discuss the aesthetics of a thumbnail image. The upcoming Olympics and World Championships are mentioned as important events in the cycling calendar. The hosts discuss their predictions for the upcoming mountain bike World Cup and mention various riders to watch out for. They talk about the use of carbon monoxide for altitude training and the controversy surrounding it. The conversation shifts to the topic of national championships and the idea of creating new categories. They also discuss the use of arrow bars in gravel racing and the safety concerns associated with them. Integrated arrow bars can provide advantages for racing The choice of tire size and type can impact performance VO2 max testing can be a useful tool for assessing fitness The hosts enjoy friendly competition and banter about their racing results Future plans include potential showdowns and collaborations   Titles The Impact of Clickbait on YouTube The Pronunciation Debate: Pogacar or Pogacha? The Aesthetics of a Thumbnail Image The Performance of Mathieu van der Poel and Wout van Aert The Use of Arrow Bars in Gravel Racing Predictions for the Mountain Bike World Cup The Tire Size Debate Exploring VO2 Max Testing   Sound Bites "I know this is clickbait, but I still watched it." "Your tire knowledge is actually kind of impressive." "I'm gonna leave this so open-ended that people will have to watch it." "If he just wins six stages again for the next three years, he's got the record in the next three years." "He needs 35 to tie it yeah We had they said if he stays on the current trajectory of" "He's 100 % trying to go for the Olympics. Dude, think of how bad he wants a gold." "Predictions for the Mountain Bike World Cup" "Controversy Surrounding Carbon Monoxide for Altitude Training" "Exploring New Categories in National Championships" "So you can do mad bunny hops" "Chase flatted six miles into the race" "If it's basically a road race, why wouldn't the truss spoke work?"   Chapters 00:00 The Impact of Clickbait on YouTube 02:02 Dylan's Tire Expertise and Decision to Quit Crit Racing 06:48 Pogacar's Dominance and Controversy in Cycling 09:21 The Pronunciation Debate: Pogacar or Pogacha? 14:06 Pogacar's Potential Future Success in Grand Tours 20:01 Tadej Pogacar's Potential Record-Breaking Performance 22:05 Discussion on Mathieu van der Poel and Wout van Aert 24:59 Anticipation for the Olympics and World Championships 32:00 The Aesthetics of a Thumbnail Image 38:12 Predictions for the Mountain Bike World Cup 45:05 Controversy Surrounding Carbon Monoxide for Altitude Training 49:48 Exploring New Categories in National Championships 55:18 The Use of Arrow Bars in Gravel Racing 58:47 Optimizing Equipment for Racing 59:11 The Tire Size Debate 01:01:13 Exploring VO2 Max Testing 01:06:24 Friendly Racing Rivalries and Future Plans

Honestly with Bari Weiss
Are We Living in ‘Late Soviet America'? Niall Ferguson and Jonah Goldberg Debate.

Honestly with Bari Weiss

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2024 60:52


A few weeks ago, fresh from being knighted by King Charles, historian Sir Niall Ferguson officially joined The Free Press as a columnist. His first piece was rather provocatively called “We're All Soviets Now.” He argued why he thinks today's United States resembles the decaying Soviet Union of the '70s and '80s. We're physically unwell, heavily in debt, run by an out-of-touch gerontocracy, and subjected to a bogus ideology pushed by elites. This was published before the disastrous presidential debate between Donald Trump and Joe Biden. Since then, Niall has only doubled down. He argued in his most recent column that the reason our system only offers up an embarrassing blowhard and a senile old man lies in contemporary America's similarities to the Soviet Union in the 1980s. Unsurprisingly, these provocative arguments drove some people crazy. We'd scarcely updated the homepage with that first column before the rebuttals came pouring in. But none were quite as passionate and thorough as the one written by Dispatch editor-in-chief Jonah Goldberg, who devoted an entire column to pushing back on Ferguson. In “No, We Are Not Living in ‘Late Soviet America,' ” Goldberg conceded some of the basic facts presented by Ferguson, but aggressively objected to the idea that the United States was in any way similar to late-stage Soviet communism. “Do we have problems that have some superficial similarities with the Soviets? Sure. But. . . come on.” Goldberg continued: “The Soviet Union built a wall to keep its subjects trapped inside their evil empire. Many Americans understandably believe we need a wall to keep millions of people desperate to live here out.” Because at the end of the day, Goldberg argued, “America is simply not like the Soviet Union.”  Ferguson fought back on Twitter in an 18-part thread, in which he accused Goldberg of “pure cope.” And back and forth they went for days. We're happy to announce that they agreed to hash it all out on this very podcast. . . today.  The debate we ended up having was much bigger than merely whether the U.S. can accurately be compared to the USSR. It got to the heart of a core disagreement on the right in recent years about the health of American democracy—and whether the nation is still exceptional, albeit flawed, or if the country is in a state of inexorable decline.  It's a fitting conversation to have right after the Fourth of July and as pundits and politicians fill airtime and columns with questions about our leader's fitness for the job, presidential transparency, and whether it's undemocratic to replace Biden on the election ticket. Because today's conversation gets to the heart of how the American project is faring, and what we should do to save the country we all love before it's too late. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Klassik aktuell
Aufnahmeprüfung: Riccardo Chailly – "Inno delle Nazioni"

Klassik aktuell

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2024 3:16


Riccardo Chailly hat als Musikchef der Mailänder Scala bereits diverse Verdi-Alben mit Chor und Orchester eingespielt. Jetzt schließt er daran an mit Giuseppe Verdis Vermächtnis, den "Quattro pezzi sacri".

Kultura na weekend
Inność ponad wszystko

Kultura na weekend

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2024 32:59


Przed lubelskim festiwalem Wschód Kultury – Inne Brzmienia rozmawiamy o muzycznym lecie, trudnym sezonie, równowadze na scenie i wiernej widowni.

Il Mondo
Modi vince le elezioni indiane, ma con meno seggi del previsto. Un brano di Gigi D'Agostino è diventato un inno neonazista in Germania.

Il Mondo

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2024 23:10


Dopo un processo elettorale durato sei settimane, il primo giugno si sono concluse le elezioni parlamentari in India. L'amour toujours è finito al centro del dibattito pubblico tedesco dopo che sui social network è circolato un video in cui in gruppo di persone la canta usando le parole di uno slogan razzista.CONJunko Terao, editor di Asia di InternazionaleLeonardo Bianchi, giornalista di FactaIndia: https://apnews.com/live/india-election-results-updates#0000018f-e310-d575-abff-f7133e4e0000Articolo: Le ucraine che resistono di Katja Aleksanderhttps://www.internazionale.it/magazine/katja-aleksander/2024/05/30/le-ucraine-che-resistonoDisco della settimana: Spell blanket - collected demos 2006-2009 dei BroadcastSe ascolti questo podcast e ti piace, abbonati a Internazionale. È un modo concreto per sostenerci e per aiutarci a garantire ogni giorno un'informazione di qualità. Vai su internazionale.it/podcastScrivi a podcast@internazionale.it o manda un vocale a +39 3347063050Consulenza editoriale di Chiara Nielsen.Produzione di Claudio Balboni e Vincenzo De Simone.Musiche di Tommaso Colliva e Raffaele Scogna.Direzione creativa di Jonathan Zenti.

Monologato Podcast
Tananai, Madame, Rose Villain - MILANO SIAMO NOI (Inno Inter)

Monologato Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 3:42


La vecchia "Pazza Inter Amala" sì che era una hit. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Prima Pagina
21 aprile 60 miliardi per armare l'Ucraina ; Europee le ultime candidature ; Il film choc a Cannes. Di Italo Carmignani

Prima Pagina

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2024 19:12


#Ucraina #America 60 miliardi per le armi a #Kiev @AngeloPaura; #Europee le candidature di #Tajani #Bonaccini @AndreaBulleri ; #Inno di #Mameli #polemoca @LorenaLoiacono ; #Eredità fa scoprire tesoro d' #archeologia @ValeriaDiCorrado ; #Cannes #cinema #film #Megalopolis #Droga #sesso @GloriaSatta

Monologato Podcast
Geolier - Sarò con te (je more pè te) - Nuovo Inno Napoli SSC X Documentario

Monologato Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2024 4:19


Nuovo Inno Napoli SSC X Documentario in uscita il 4 maggio per la celebrazione dello scudetto del Napoli. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Fiction Lab
PREMIERE: Bleu Noir - Brume épaisse [Low Volume Randomization]

Fiction Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2024 5:37


bleu noir. First and foremost, a friendship composed of Edouard-Marc and Bastien. Two companions who, in their distinct singularities, come together to converge towards a common universe. Complementarity is created from the beginning of the project to the finishing touches of their musical collaborations. A sincere, imaginative, and heartfelt approach. Random but shared experiences, such as numerous musical events ranging from concerts to festivals, inspire them. All of this leads to beautiful creations like this EP named: Naviguer à vue. “Naviguer à vue” is the story in a fictitious and picturesque imagination, of a collective adventure taking place on a boat. The construction and launching of it, welcoming "Hordes" of people, are represented by "Recherche hivernale". A long aquatic journey through "Brume épaisse", filled with “Emergences of details”, as beautiful as they are stressful. Presented to the people on the boat is an internal and collective struggle, "Psychomachia". A battle between vice and virtue, between the humble human and the one of a self-centered and selfish society. “Inno”, floating on the surface and swimming, between two worlds, unable to leave the fluid and yet aware that it exists. A track that could have been called “Innolude”. The sound translations of these different emotions and sensitivities, vectorized by “Diversions currents then landscapes”, make this EP a true journey. Today's premiere is the second track from this great release, "Brume épaisse." This eerie, aquatic techno odyssey is defined by a powerful bassline that builds tension like The Marin, bringing thick coastal fog over a southern seaside city. "Brume épaisse" boasts a delicate yet murky atmosphere, perfectly grasping the essence of a late-night after-hours track. “Naviguer à vue” EP is set for release in the second half of April. https://soundcloud.com/lowvolumerandomization https://soundcloud.com/user-676721263 https://www.instagram.com/lowvolumerandomization/ https://www.instagram.com/bleunoirr/ Follow us on social media: https://soundcloud.com/itsdelayed https://linktr.ee/delayed https://www.itsdelayed.com https://www.facebook.com/itsdelayed https://www.instagram.com/_____delayed https://www.youtube.com/@_____delayed

The Live eCommerce Podcast
The Vcommerce Show 22: Curated videocommerce news - Flip new founding round, Amazon & Retail Inno, Meta new Video player...

The Live eCommerce Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2024 24:43


Curated #videocommerce news of the week #ecommerce #retailVCommerce experts Matt Hodlofski & Nicolas Bailliache every Friday at 11am ET for a lively discussion on the latest developments shaping the #videocommerce and #liveshopping landscape. #vcommerceReceive Free Video UGC alert: https://hubs.ly/Q02qJN4H0Ep 22Flip new founding roundAmazon, Retail & InnovationMeta New Video PlayerShopify 3rd party App - data breachAbout eStreamly: eStreamly enables shoppable livestreams & videos across platforms, including your website, social media, SMS, emails... Video become a direct ecommerce extension with in-video checkout, boasting a 10-15% conversion rate. Fast and reliable, it's your payment, your inventory, your ecommerce. https://hubs.ly/Q02qJNmM0About Matt: He has over 25 years of vcommerce experience within product marketing and sales. He currently is a partner at e6 marketing, a firm that help brands to go on QVC/ HSNReceive weekly live shopping industry updates and tips in our newsletter: https://try.estreamly.com/newsletterBlog Post URL https://get.estreamly.com/blog

Italiano Automatico Podcast
Episode 613: Cultura Italiana: La Storia Dell’inno d’Italia | Imparare l’Italiano

Italiano Automatico Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2024 8:06


Hai capito la storia dell'Inno d'Italia? INIZIA IL QUIZ: https://bit.ly/3vsRVN3Nel podcast di oggi vedremo qualcosa di molto speciale, faremo un viaggio attraverso la storia affascinante dell'Inno d'Italia, ed esploreremo le radici, il contesto storico e l'evoluzione di questo canto meraviglioso.Scopri di più sulla storia dell'Inno D'Italia con questo podcast mentre eserciti la tua comprensione della lingua italiana.Capitoli Del Podcast:0:00 - Introduzione1:12 - Chi E Quando È Stato Scritto L'inno Di Mameli?1:53 - Chi Era Goffredo Mameli? 3;04 - Come Si È Evoluto L'inno Di Mameli?3:51 - Cosa Significano Le Parole Dell'inno Di Mameli? 6:56 - Conclusione

Monde Numérique - Jérôme Colombain
[Inno de la semaine] J'ai chatté avec Elon Musk et téléphoné à Epicure

Monde Numérique - Jérôme Colombain

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2024 7:35


Des sites spécialisés permettent aujourd'hui de dialoguer virtuellement avec des avatars basés sur des personnalités publiques. Au-delà du divertissement, ces clones virtuels peuvent servir à des fins éducatives, professionnelles, ou même thérapeutiques, ouvrant la voie à une nouvelle révolution dans le domaine de l'IA.Ces avatars fournissent des réponses réalistes et parfois troublantes, basées sur les données publiques disponibles sur les individus qu'ils représentent. Au-delà du simple divertissement, ces clones virtuels peuvent servir à des fins éducatives, professionnelles, ou même thérapeutiques, ouvrant la voie à une nouvelle révolution dans le domaine de l'IA.Les sites en question : Character.ai, Delphi.ai, Coachvox.AI.

Captivate the Room
The Neuroscience of Pitch

Captivate the Room

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2024 39:05


Welcome to the show. Over the month of March I'm going to be featuring a lot of women's voices and in most of my solo shows I'll be talking about specific things that women deal with in relation to their voices. Today, I'm going to be talking about the neuroscience of pitch specifically in relation to women's voices and how higher pitch can be problematic.  I'm referencing the Huberman Lab podcast and Chris Voss in this episode. In NO way am I being critical of women's voices.  Women have a lot of societal implications around their voices, many of them lead to women speaking in a higher pitch, getting stuck in a high pitch and not even speaking in their real voice. There are definite issues around speaking at a higher pitch constantly in relation to how the brain processes sound which is exactly the angle I'll be talking to in this episode.

Easy Italian: Learn Italian with real conversations | Imparare l'italiano con conversazioni reali

Oggi parliamo di cibo, cercando un po' di dividere tutti gli italiani con un piatto inventato da poco, e poi l'inno degli italiani! Chi lo ha scritto? E di cosa perla? Venite, entrate e mettetevi comodi, stiamo per iniziare. Trascrizione interattiva e Vocab Helper Support Easy Italian and get interactive transcripts, live vocabulary and bonus content: easyitalian.fm/membership Note dell'episodio 3 Essential Words to Speak Italian Naturally - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sWZ2n4XkgeM Iniziamo subito con un po' di poesia, vi raccontiamo la storia di una libreria un po' fuori dal comune. Vi incuriosiamo con un cartello appeso fuori ad una libreria che dice: "informiamo la clientela che il tempo, l'amore, la fame e la bicicletta possono modificare gli orari di apertura e di chiusura di questa libreria" https://torino.repubblica.it/cronaca/2024/01/17/news/illibraiocheapreechiudeinbaseafameamore_bici-421893920/ Dove è questa libreria? Ad Alba, una piccola città in Piemonte. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alba_(Italia) Si torna a parlare di cibo!!! Matteo è felicissimo! Parliamo di uno strano cibo da strada, chiamato dallo chef che lo ha proposto, il Croccancino. Cos'è? https://video.repubblica.it/il-gusto/gusto/masterchef-il-concorrente-inventa-il-croccancino-cannavacciuolo-e-locatelli-se-lo-contendono/463005/463967 Voi lo mangereste? Piccola nota, ma si dice arancinA o arancinO? A Palermo si preferisce la declinazione femminile, mentre a Catania è il maschile ad aver avuto la meglio. Secondo l'Accademia della Crusca, ente che ha studiato le origini del nome, sarebbe più corretto parlare di arancine, in quanto la preparazione ricorderebbe, nella forma e nella nuance, il frutto dell'arancio. E poi andiamo a Genova! Di chi parliamo? Parliamo del signor Goffredo Mameli: https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goffredo_Mameli L'autore del testo dell'inno d'Italia. Un signore molto curioso, una delle cose più curiose? Ha scritto l'inno d'Italia a 20 anni. Trascrizione Raffaele: [0:23] Buongiorno, Matteo! Matteo: [0:25] Buongiorno, come va? Raffaele: [0:27] Tutto bene qui! Che dici, che si dice dalle tue parti? Matteo: [0:31] Eh, tutto bene. Ti dirò: oggi è una bella giornata apparentemente soleggiata. Temo che finirà come ieri, nel senso che fino a ora di pranzo c'è il sole. Perché c'è tanta luce. Poi inizia a arrivare un po' troppa foschia e diventa tutto un po' grigio. ... Support Easy Italian and get interactive transcripts, live vocabulary and bonus content: easyitalian.fm/membership

Wintrust Business Lunch
Wintrust Business Lunch 1/22/24: Market rally, Inno Under 25, OpenAI lawsuit

Wintrust Business Lunch

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2024


Segment 1: John Bever, Financial Advisor, Phase 3 Advisory Services, joins John to talk about why the S&P 500 reaching new highs, the economy being in good shape overall, inflation finally coming under control, when we expect the next interest rate cut, why election years tend to mean stock market volatility, and where you can find opportunities […]

EVOQ.BIKE Cycling Podcast
Innokenty Zavyalov: Top Gravel Racer. Training + Racing

EVOQ.BIKE Cycling Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2024 80:05


Innokenty, aka Inno, aka Premium Russian on IG, is one of the country's best gravel racers. Having been selected for the Lifetime Grand Prix, as well as some awesome results throughout the year, it's hard to dispute this. Inno sits down for an extremely candid conversation about his process, success, and failures along the way. Some of you that have been listening to the podcast know that I have a routine format that I like to follow; it's the cycling version of Tribe of Mentors by Tim Ferriss....similar questions to lots of different athletes....well, we are changing things up for 2024. Landry asked me if I was going to "make the podcast more interesting", LOL. When I asked him what he meant, he disliked the usual routine questions. While those genuinely interest me, Tom said a bit more eloquently: "Sometimes you start to go down a rabbit hole with an athlete, and these are really interesting points, but then revert back to your questions, because you might be feeling THAT is what the listener wants. Don't do that! Just roll. Just talk." So, in 2024, the routine Q's are mostly out. They will surely bubble up a bit as we talk training, but I need to evolve. So here goes! This was the first podcast where it felt much more natural. While some of you liked the run down of routine questions, let's shake things up a bit. We will find even more amazing gems this way. For full transparency, the questions also gave me a crutch. I'm humbled that athletes like Inno will take the time to come on the little EVOQ podcast. We've had some AMAZING guests! If I can't get them talking, the questions helped me, but that's not be developing my interview/conversational skills, and I need to up my game. Thanks for the motivation to do so LB and Tom! Hope it resonates with you. Thanks for being a part of this community. We're starting to get our footing. We need it, I hear the moon is a rocky place. Let's gooooooo. 00:00 Introduction and Innokenty's partner's music 3:00 Where does Innokenty train in winter 7:41 What other things is Innokenty into off the bike 10:12 What is Innokenty's sport background 19:40 Weird training methods that worked 21:44 How to settle the stomach after too many carbs 23:48 Why goal setting is important 28:52 Overtraining 31:20 Is Innokenty coached? 34:10 What discipline does Innokenty prefer / enjoy 36:55 Innokenty's favorite workouts 39:00 Low cadence and injury risk 40:30 Elite form and lifting in the gym 47:41 Mental routines for performance 51:11 Differences between road and gravel racing 53:31 Managing road and gravel 57:00 What are Innokenty's goals 1:00:21 How to manage pressure and maintain normal life 1:08:24 Social Media and cycling 1:13:30 The new direction of Evoq

La Ventana
La Ventana a las 16h | "Uno tarda 45 minutos entre que decide marcharse y lo logra": consejos para despedirse en una fiesta y no perder tiempo

La Ventana

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2023 47:16


Conversamos con Manuela Suárez sobre el tiempo que gastamos en despedirnos en las fiestas. Abordamos la ludopatía en los más jóvenes con la profesora Mercedes Escavy. Pipo Serrano nos presenta a ‘Los Revolucionarios' de ‘ONALABS Inno-Hub', para explicarnos la relación entre el sudor y la salud. Llamamos a Alejandro Pizarro para hablar sobre el cumpleaños de los famosos. Conocemos con Isaías Lafuente la palabra del día: ‘Ojalá'. 

La Zanzara
La Zanzara del 20 novembre 2023

La Zanzara

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2023


"Io non sono colpevole", duro editoriale del conduttore sulla morte della giovane Giulia Cecchettin.Inno alla motosega, anche il conduttore con lo strumento del neopresidente argentino Milei."Non faccia la morale se poi mostra simboli satanici", il consigliere regionale veneto Stefano Valdegamberi contro Elena Cecchettin.Annarita Briganti e il patriarcato. Duro scontro con Cruciani e gli ascoltatori.Jean Paul Vanoli e l'omosessualità che ci viene instillata.

New York Muscle Radio Podcast
I Took a Sleep Supplement for 14 Days Heres What Happened (Inno Supps Night Shred Review)

New York Muscle Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2023 8:49


Coffee Break with Game-Changers, presented by SAP
The Future Human Creativity and AI: Collaborate or Compete?

Coffee Break with Game-Changers, presented by SAP

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 56:36


We queried ChatGPT: “Please tell me about the Future of Human Creativity and AI.” Response: While AI has shown the potential to generate creative outputs, such as music, art, and literature, there is a long way to go before it can fully replicate human creativity. One possible scenario: AI and humans will collaborate to create new forms of art and creative content, allowing humans to focus on emotional expression and storytelling, while leaving more repetitive and routine tasks to the machines. Another scenario: AI will eventually surpass human creativity altogether. We asked ChatGPT: “When will AI have emotions to enable it to become truly creative? Response: Currently, most AI systems are designed to be purely logical and analytical, processing data and making decisions based on pre-programmed rules and algorithms. Since emotions are shaped by experiences and relationships, replicating emotions in machines would require a deep understanding of human psychology and a new generation of AI technologies. And we asked ChatGPT: “Send me movie quotes about creativity.” Response: – “We can't be afraid to be weird, to be different, to be ourselves. That's the only way to truly create something amazing.” [The Greatest Showman, 2017] – “I believe that everyone has a creativity gene. It's just a matter of finding that gene and nurturing it.” [The Soloist, 2009] We'll ask Glenda “Badass Goddess” Benevides, Gene “Mindspawn Mastering” Williams, Graciela “Captain Mama” Tiscareño-Sato and Steve “Voices of Impact” Gallegos for their take on The Future Human Creativity in the Age of AI: Collaborate or Compete?

Coffee Break with Game-Changers, presented by SAP
The Future Human Creativity and AI: Collaborate or Compete?

Coffee Break with Game-Changers, presented by SAP

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 56:36


We queried ChatGPT: “Please tell me about the Future of Human Creativity and AI.” Response: While AI has shown the potential to generate creative outputs, such as music, art, and literature, there is a long way to go before it can fully replicate human creativity. One possible scenario: AI and humans will collaborate to create new forms of art and creative content, allowing humans to focus on emotional expression and storytelling, while leaving more repetitive and routine tasks to the machines. Another scenario: AI will eventually surpass human creativity altogether. We asked ChatGPT: “When will AI have emotions to enable it to become truly creative? Response: Currently, most AI systems are designed to be purely logical and analytical, processing data and making decisions based on pre-programmed rules and algorithms. Since emotions are shaped by experiences and relationships, replicating emotions in machines would require a deep understanding of human psychology and a new generation of AI technologies. And we asked ChatGPT: “Send me movie quotes about creativity.” Response: – “We can't be afraid to be weird, to be different, to be ourselves. That's the only way to truly create something amazing.” [The Greatest Showman, 2017] – “I believe that everyone has a creativity gene. It's just a matter of finding that gene and nurturing it.” [The Soloist, 2009] We'll ask Glenda “Badass Goddess” Benevides, Gene “Mindspawn Mastering” Williams, Graciela “Captain Mama” Tiscareño-Sato and Steve “Voices of Impact” Gallegos for their take on The Future Human Creativity in the Age of AI: Collaborate or Compete?

Coffee Break with Game-Changers, presented by SAP
The Future Human Creativity and AI: Collaborate or Compete?

Coffee Break with Game-Changers, presented by SAP

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 56:36


We queried ChatGPT: “Please tell me about the Future of Human Creativity and AI.” Response: While AI has shown the potential to generate creative outputs, such as music, art, and literature, there is a long way to go before it can fully replicate human creativity. One possible scenario: AI and humans will collaborate to create new forms of art and creative content, allowing humans to focus on emotional expression and storytelling, while leaving more repetitive and routine tasks to the machines. Another scenario: AI will eventually surpass human creativity altogether. We asked ChatGPT: “When will AI have emotions to enable it to become truly creative? Response: Currently, most AI systems are designed to be purely logical and analytical, processing data and making decisions based on pre-programmed rules and algorithms. Since emotions are shaped by experiences and relationships, replicating emotions in machines would require a deep understanding of human psychology and a new generation of AI technologies. And we asked ChatGPT: “Send me movie quotes about creativity.” Response: – “We can't be afraid to be weird, to be different, to be ourselves. That's the only way to truly create something amazing.” [The Greatest Showman, 2017] – “I believe that everyone has a creativity gene. It's just a matter of finding that gene and nurturing it.” [The Soloist, 2009] We'll ask Glenda “Badass Goddess” Benevides, Gene “Mindspawn Mastering” Williams, Graciela “Captain Mama” Tiscareño-Sato and Steve “Voices of Impact” Gallegos for their take on The Future Human Creativity in the Age of AI: Collaborate or Compete?

Marriage Is Hard
Detachment from the Trauma & CPTSD (Part Two)

Marriage Is Hard

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2023 24:36


Complex post-traumatic stress disorder recovery is all about recovering the inner sense of innocence. Today, I want to encourage you to return to your body and awaken your senses so that you can be fully present for this special episode. If you haven't listened to the previous episode in this two-part series, please go back and do so now! Today, you will learn how to resurrect the part of yourself that is aware of the trauma you have experienced, what questions to ask the old version of yourself, how to recover your innocence, and the importance of surrendering to whatever response you may have to this process. I will walk you through how you can return to yourself and fully detach from your trauma. Thank you for joining me and remembering to love yourself!  Key Points From This Episode: A reminder to listen to Part One, as it sets important context for this episode. Take a deep breath, come back to your body, and be in this space with me today.  What CPTSD recovery is: the inner sense of innocence and why it is a birthright.  How to call forward parts of you that are aware of your trauma and what that may feel like.  Why you must surrender to your internal responses and be proud of surviving. Asking the old version of yourself if they are okay and how you can help.  Affirmations to tell your old self to help them come into the light.  Why there are no mistakes in this process. The solution for detaching from trauma: attaching to the parts that carry the burden. Tweetables: “CPTSD recovery as a journey is about the restoration of innocence. Inno-cence. It is an inner sense of the innocence [or] what we have lost along the way.” — Tanner Wallace [0:04:57] “I am whole. I am complete. I am worthy. I am beautiful. I am magnificent.” — Tanner Wallace [0:07:15] “Whatever happened, however long it [happened for], that is not you!” — Tanner Wallace [0:17:48] Links Mentioned in Today's Episode: CPTSD Medicine on Instagram Tanner Wallace on Facebook HELD By Tanner Email List CPTSD Medicine Podcast