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What makes a city great? In this episode of The Real State Podcast, hosts Alex Norman and Jamie Blond unpack a BBC-driven debate about America's top cities and the battle for the next spot behind New York and Los Angeles. With Chicago long treated as the default #3, they challenge the assumptions and make the case that Miami's growth, global pull, and economic momentum may be reshaping the ranking. They break down nine criteria often used to judge “greatness,” including economic output, industry concentration, cultural export and tourism, migration, infrastructure, tax policy, and long-term resilience. Along the way, they compare New York's legacy power, LA's cultural machine and quality of life advantages, Chicago's shifting role, and Miami's rise as a destination for capital, talent, and global attention. They also touch on other contenders like San Francisco, Washington DC, Atlanta, and Boston, plus why outsiders may be most excited about Miami right now. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Nick and Justin lose it six times over three segments. Post show song: AMPULES, from the recent THE LUCKY NIGHTSICKS album RECOGNIZER (Nunziata, Murphy, Makarewicz). By the way, you can donate to this show in the link if you have more money than sense. You can follow on Insta and on Twit and can comment on these on the Boards. You can also write a 5 star review on Apple Podcasts!Theme music by Nick Nunziata and Steve Murphy and their many bands can be heard on Soundcloud.
Welcome back to another episode of Delta Waterfowl's The Voice of the Duck Hunter. Two retired U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service special agents join us for a powerful and eye-opening conversation. Rich Grosz — one of our most requested guests — returns, and this time he's joined by his longtime colleague and friend Jay Pilgrim. In this episode, we dive deeper into one of the most controversial and commonly misunderstood violations in waterfowl hunting: baiting. How do federal agents detect it? What really counts as baiting? And how do good hunters sometimes find themselves in serious trouble? Rich and Jay share firsthand stories from decades in the field enforcing federal waterfowl laws, along with lessons every duck hunter should understand before stepping into the blind. If you care about ethical hunting and protecting the future of waterfowl, this is a must-watch episode.Website and Social Media Links: Delta Waterfowl: https://deltawaterfowl.org Facebook: /DeltaFans/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/deltawaterfowl/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/DeltaWaterfowl/Delta Waterfowl: https://deltawaterfowl.org Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DeltaFans/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/deltawaterfowl/Twitter: https://twitter.com/DeltaWaterfowl/
What's really happening inside the larynx when we ‘tilt?' In this episode, Alexa is joined by voice researcher Mathias Aaen to unpack the science behind thyroid tilt - exploring what his latest studies reveal about pitch, vocal fold lengthening, and healthy singing. The pair cut through common misconceptions, translate research into studio-ready language, and ask the big question: are our teaching prompts actually doing what we think they are? If you love practical pedagogy grounded in solid science, this one's for you. WHAT'S IN THIS PODCAST? 2:58 What is tilt? Anatomy & physiology 6:35 CVT framework 16:13 Study results 22:45 Physiology vs the perceptual 25:36 Teaching prompts 43:10 Vocal fold length and pitch change 48:14 Enemies of tilt 52:37 Common misconceptions about tilt About the presenter HERE RELEVANT MENTIONS & LINKS Investigating Laryngeal “Tilt” on Same-pitch Phonation—Preliminary Findings of Vocal Mode, Metal and Density Parameters as Alternatives to Cricothyroid-Thyroarytenoid “Mix” by Mathias Aaen et al Correlating Degree of Thyroid Tilt Independent of fo Control as a Mechanism for Phonatory Density with EGG and Acoustic Measures across Loudness Conditions by Mathias Aaen et al Singing Teachers Talk - Ep.131 Mastering Research Papers: How to Read with Ease and Extract Knowledge Complete Vocal Training Ian Howell Dr Mark Tempesta Kerrie Obert Dr Ingo Titze Estill CVT App Folia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica Manuel Garcia Praat ABOUT THE GUEST Mathias Aaen, PhD, is a voice researcher, educator, and certified rehabilitation specialist. He serves as Honorary Researcher at Nottingham University Hospitals and VP of Research & Collaboration at CVI, and was previously a Fulbright Fellow at UC Berkeley. His work focuses on voice physiology, acoustics, auditory-perceptual analysis, and voice habilitation and rehabilitation, with groundbreaking research into the physiology and health of contemporary commercial music styles, including rock and heavy metal. He recently completed a PostDoc investigating the CVT framework as a clinical treatment for dysphonia in MTD and ABI patients. An award-winning researcher and Authorised CVT Teacher, Mathias is also an active performer who has worked with leading opera houses and voice professionals worldwide. SEE FULL BIO HEREWebsite
In this episode of the Wine and Gold Talk podcast, Ethan Sands and Chris Fedor revisit the Cavaliers' loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder and ask a bigger question: did the trade deadline moves actually ease the pressure on Evan Mobley or intensify the evaluation? The roster upgrades were designed to stabilize Cleveland's perimeter defense and lighten Mobley's load. Instead, the Thunder exposed familiar cracks: defensive rebounding lapses, struggles containing physicality and breakdowns around the 3-point line against elite competition. Rebounding is the most concerning playoff flaw, and an off night from Mobley magnified the issue. With a pivotal six-game stretch ahead, the Cavs are entering a seeding-defining window that will test the new rotation against postseason-caliber opponents. If Cleveland wants to survive the Eastern Conference gauntlet, growth in those areas is non-negotiable — and Mobley's role in solving them may determine how far this team can go. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This DermSurgery Digest bonus content aptly named “At the Microscope” shares the latest research and techniques in dermatopathology. In this episode, contributors review Endocrine Mucin ProducingSweat Gland Carcinoma (EMPSGC). Contributors to this podcast include Naomi Lawrence, MD, Dermatologic Surgery Digital Content Editor; Ashley Elsensohn, MD, MPH, DermSurgery Digest at the Microscope co-host; Christine Ahn, MD; Jeff Gardner, MD; Marina K. Ibraheim, MD; and Michael P. Lee, MD. Articles featured in this episode include: · “TRPS1 Expression in Endocrine Mucin-Producing Sweat Gland Carcinoma: Diagnostic Utility and Pitfalls” The American Journal of Dermatopathology· “Utility of Insulinoma-Associated Protein 1 (INSM1) and Mucin 2 (MUC2) Immunohistochemistry in the Distinction of Endocrine Mucin-Producing Sweat Gland Carcinoma From Morphologic Mimics” The American Journal of Dermatopathology· “Endocrine Mucin-Producing Sweat Gland Carcinoma: Emerging Evidence of Multicentric Cutaneous Origin and Occasional Concurrence With Analogous Breast Tumors” The American Journal of Dermatopathology· “An Update on Endocrine Mucin-producing Sweat Gland Carcinoma” The American Journal of Surgical Pathology Your feedback is encouraged. Please contact communicationstaff@asds.net.
Today we have Tomer Bar, VP of Security Research at SafeBreach Labs, discussing their work on "Prince of Persia: A Decade of Iranian Nation-State APT Campaign Activity under the Microscope". In this first installment of SafeBreach's deep dive into the Iranian-linked APT known as “Prince of Persia,” originally exposed by Palo Alto Networks Unit 42, researchers reveal that the group never truly went dark after 2022—but instead evolved. Led by Tomer, the investigation uncovers new variants of Foudre and Tonnerre malware, expanded campaign scale, active C2 infrastructure through late 2025, and a shift toward Telegram-based command-and-control. The research provides rare, sustained visibility into nearly a decade of Iranian nation-state cyber operations, offering fresh indicators of compromise and insight into how the group continues to refine its tooling, obfuscation, and targeting. The research can be found here: Prince of Persia, Part 1: A Decade of Iranian Nation-State APT Campaign Activity under the Microscope Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Former felony prosecutor Eric Faddis joins True Crime Today for a deep dive into two of the most significant criminal trials happening in the country — the Kouri Richins fentanyl murder case and the Colin Gray parental accountability trial.The Richins case begins February 23rd with the defense riding pretrial wins: a recanting drug source, excluded prosecution experts, and severed financial charges. But the state has an alleged prior poisoning attempt, Carmen Lauber's expected testimony that Kouri requested fentanyl and "the Michael Jackson stuff," Google searches allegedly about lethal doses and luxury prisons, forged insurance documents, a jail cell letter allegedly coaching family testimony, and five times the lethal dose in Eric's system.In Georgia, Colin Gray faces 29 felony counts including second-degree murder. Prosecutors say he gave his 14-year-old son an AR-15 despite alleged FBI warnings, school shooting threats, and a text from Colt allegedly saying "the blood is on your hands." Prosecutors allege a Parkland shrine sat in the bedroom. When officers arrived, Colin allegedly said, "I knew it."Faddis analyzes every angle of both cases — defense strategy, prosecution evidence, legal theories, and his honest assessment of where each is headed.#KouriRichins #ColinGray #EricRichins #ColtGray #FentanylMurder #SchoolShooting #TrueCrimeToday #EricFaddis #HiddenKillers #TrueCrimeJoin Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/@hiddenkillerspodInstagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodListen Ad-Free On Apple Podcasts Here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/true-crime-today-premium-plus-ad-free-advance-episode/id1705422872This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
Today we have Tomer Bar, VP of Security Research at SafeBreach Labs, discussing their work on "Prince of Persia: A Decade of Iranian Nation-State APT Campaign Activity under the Microscope". In this first installment of SafeBreach's deep dive into the Iranian-linked APT known as “Prince of Persia,” originally exposed by Palo Alto Networks Unit 42, researchers reveal that the group never truly went dark after 2022—but instead evolved. Led by Tomer, the investigation uncovers new variants of Foudre and Tonnerre malware, expanded campaign scale, active C2 infrastructure through late 2025, and a shift toward Telegram-based command-and-control. The research provides rare, sustained visibility into nearly a decade of Iranian nation-state cyber operations, offering fresh indicators of compromise and insight into how the group continues to refine its tooling, obfuscation, and targeting. The research can be found here: Prince of Persia, Part 1: A Decade of Iranian Nation-State APT Campaign Activity under the Microscope Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick and Justin crumble down to junk after 30 minutes in the real world. Post show song: CUSHIONS BEFORE PINS, from the upcoming PKG album THE MOTHER (Nunziata, Robinson, Murphy, Makarewicz). By the way, you can donate to this show in the link if you have more money than sense. You can follow on Insta and on Twit and can comment on these on the Boards. You can also write a 5 star review on Apple Podcasts!Theme music by Nick Nunziata and Steve Murphy and their many bands can be heard on Soundcloud.
Everyone's got an opinion about money (especially the people with a book deal or a TV show). Some of that advice is useful. Some of it sounds better on a stage than it works in real life. Let's break it down.WAYS TO CONNECT:Website: https://www.johnchoi.net/Phone: 847-247-0850Blog: https://bit.ly/3CNltG2
How do you design a research outreach strategy that actually works?In this solo episode of Under the Microscope, Dr. Pranoti Kshirsagar breaks down a practical framework for science communication, research dissemination, and outreach planning for research projects and grant proposals.If you are preparing an ERC, Horizon Europe, or institutional research project, this episode gives you a structured approach to building a clear and effective dissemination strategy.You will learn the three foundational pillars of successful outreach:Define and align your audience — who is it for and why now?Craft the core message — what is the story behind your research?Choose the right channels and formats — podcasting, social media, press, website, conferences, and beyond.Using the QuanTour global quantum science campaign as a real-world example, this episode shows how a structured communication strategy can scale across 12 labs, multiple countries, and diverse audiences without diluting the message This episode is for:Principal InvestigatorsResearch group leadersERC and Horizon Europe applicantsScience communication professionalsInnovation-driven research teamsBecause impactful science communication is not accidental. It is strategic.Writing a research proposal and need help? We'd be happy to help. Contact us: https://thesciencetalk.com/contact-us/
With the European Union launching a formal investigation into fast fashion giant Shein over the Chinese business' possible breaches of digital law, we hear from Thomas Regnier on what the EU Commission's concerns are. Andrew Peach speaks to Oscar-winning film and TV producer Tom Nunan on the latest in Netflix and Paramount's tug-of-war over Warner Bros. Elsewhere, German drugs giant Bayer proposes to pay more than US$7.25bn (£5.35bn) to settle claims that its weedkiller Roundup causes cancer. And Iran closes the Strait of Hormuz for military drills... but will it affect global oil prices? The latest business and finance news from around the world, on the BBC. (Picture: People walk past a Shein pop-up store at immersive retail space Future Stores, ahead of its grand opening in London, Great Britain, on 24 September, 2025. Credit: Isabel Infantes / Reuters.)
A bipartisan truth-finding commission has been officially created by the New Mexico House of Representatives to investigate what happened at Jeffrey Epstein's former Zorro Ranch near Santa Fe and the state's connections to his activities. The resolution creating the four-member panel passed unanimously 62-0 and appoints two Democrats and two Republicans, including Rep. Andrea Romero, who sponsored the measure, and members with legal and investigative backgrounds. The commission is scheduled to hold its first meeting this week, will allow public testimony, has subpoena power to compel witnesses to testify, and is expected to publicly post information it gathers. Though it cannot directly launch criminal investigations, it can coordinate with law enforcement and will issue a report by the end of 2026 outlining its findings and recommendations.Lawmakers say the commission aims to explore gaps in past enforcement and understanding of allegations of sexual abuse and human trafficking tied to Epstein's long tenure in New Mexico, where civil suits have accused him of abusing women and girls at the ranch. The initiative comes amid ongoing scrutiny following the release of federal files that mention New Mexico figures and activities, and officials have pointed to the need to ensure such crimes are fully documented and that “gaps in the law and enforcement” are addressed. Past state efforts never resulted in criminal charges, and the panel's work could renew focus on what state officials knew and how these events unfolded.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Truth-finding commission focused on Epstein's activities in New Mexico set to ramp up quickly
In this installment of our Under the Microscope series, we break down the meal replacement powder: Ka'Chava. We review its nutrition profile, ingredient features, and cost while asking a simple but important question: does it actually function as a complete meal? If you've ever considered relying on an all-in-one shake for convenience, this conversation will help you think more critically about what you're getting for your money.-------Drop a question in our free Patreon Community and get access to bonus content with Bob and Dina by upgrading to the Gold Level membership. You'll also be showing your support and helping to keep the podcast free of sponsorship ads. Let's connect on your platform of choice: Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube.The show is brought to you by eNRG Performance and The Nutrition Mechanic.
A bipartisan truth-finding commission has been officially created by the New Mexico House of Representatives to investigate what happened at Jeffrey Epstein's former Zorro Ranch near Santa Fe and the state's connections to his activities. The resolution creating the four-member panel passed unanimously 62-0 and appoints two Democrats and two Republicans, including Rep. Andrea Romero, who sponsored the measure, and members with legal and investigative backgrounds. The commission is scheduled to hold its first meeting this week, will allow public testimony, has subpoena power to compel witnesses to testify, and is expected to publicly post information it gathers. Though it cannot directly launch criminal investigations, it can coordinate with law enforcement and will issue a report by the end of 2026 outlining its findings and recommendations.Lawmakers say the commission aims to explore gaps in past enforcement and understanding of allegations of sexual abuse and human trafficking tied to Epstein's long tenure in New Mexico, where civil suits have accused him of abusing women and girls at the ranch. The initiative comes amid ongoing scrutiny following the release of federal files that mention New Mexico figures and activities, and officials have pointed to the need to ensure such crimes are fully documented and that “gaps in the law and enforcement” are addressed. Past state efforts never resulted in criminal charges, and the panel's work could renew focus on what state officials knew and how these events unfolded.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Truth-finding commission focused on Epstein's activities in New Mexico set to ramp up quicklyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
A bipartisan truth-finding commission has been officially created by the New Mexico House of Representatives to investigate what happened at Jeffrey Epstein's former Zorro Ranch near Santa Fe and the state's connections to his activities. The resolution creating the four-member panel passed unanimously 62-0 and appoints two Democrats and two Republicans, including Rep. Andrea Romero, who sponsored the measure, and members with legal and investigative backgrounds. The commission is scheduled to hold its first meeting this week, will allow public testimony, has subpoena power to compel witnesses to testify, and is expected to publicly post information it gathers. Though it cannot directly launch criminal investigations, it can coordinate with law enforcement and will issue a report by the end of 2026 outlining its findings and recommendations.Lawmakers say the commission aims to explore gaps in past enforcement and understanding of allegations of sexual abuse and human trafficking tied to Epstein's long tenure in New Mexico, where civil suits have accused him of abusing women and girls at the ranch. The initiative comes amid ongoing scrutiny following the release of federal files that mention New Mexico figures and activities, and officials have pointed to the need to ensure such crimes are fully documented and that “gaps in the law and enforcement” are addressed. Past state efforts never resulted in criminal charges, and the panel's work could renew focus on what state officials knew and how these events unfolded.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Truth-finding commission focused on Epstein's activities in New Mexico set to ramp up quicklyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
What if the way we judge others is actually shaping what comes back to us?In this message, A Mirror, Not a Microscope, we unpack Jesus' challenging words about judgment and discover the difference between inspecting others and examining ourselves. Through the life of King David, the story of Joseph, and the teachings of Jesus, we see how judgment can fracture relationships, blind us to our own vulnerabilities, and quietly pull us into the very pits we dig for others.This sermon invites us to trade the microscope—used to magnify flaws in others—for a mirror that reveals our own hearts. It's a call to humility, repentance, and mercy, reminding us that God is not after perfection but a broken and surrendered heart.If you've ever felt judged, caught yourself judging, or wondered how grace fits into real life, this message is for you. Mercy looks better on you. And it looks a lot like Jesus.To support the ministry of Melbourne Inclusive Church go to: www.michurch.org.au/give Melbourne Inclusive Church boldly and proudly proclaims Christ's equal love for all people regardless of their ability, socio-economic status, sexual orientation, age, gender, race, ethnicity, or culture. Melbourne Inclusive Church is part of the EMI Global family of churches.
The guys look at what could be a massive weekend in the race for the Scottish Premiership title and discuss a bad refereeing performance at Villa Park in the FA Cup. Thanks to our sponsor Roxburgh Group. Follow The Ref's View on X: @TheRefsView Never miss a moment, podcast or article on SM Media as you can follow us below on all our platforms. Website - https://thesmmediaent.wordpress.com/ YouTube - https://m.youtube.com/channel/UCO40v_nSWgc6WjmzF4IR68g Twitter - https://twitter.com/SMMediaEnt?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/SMMediaEnt/ Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/smmediaent/?hl=en iTunes - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/sm-media/id1528862527 Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/1iPnMJSgUPj4f0U58DHI9J?si=iVlyktAZTlOcDLPBvbLhzQ SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.app.goo.gl/fD17rkT6o5NNVaPj7
After a stolen-car horror in Camden, Mark Levy warns that we are one step away from "anarchy" as veteran officers admit they now fear the bureaucracy of an investigation more than the criminals they face on the street.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Alliances of many types get made, some of them unexpected.Today's StorytellersBobChuckJeremyJayToddIntro and Outro music from the track Headshot courtesy of Nicolas Jeudy and DARK FANTASY STUDIO
Nick and Justin launch the latest episode of the new Movie Microscope "regular" series of shows breaking from the show's formula. This one features the boys taking 7 Most Killed Characters in Movies. The ones where you just knew they were not coming to heal. This episode harkens back to the old show and don't be surprised if a few guests show up . Keywords: Best 7, Keyword, Wordkey, Keywordkeyword, WordkeykeywordPost show song: 2 LANE BLACKTOP, from the upcoming WATERWEIRD album, ROAD SONGS (Nunziata, Murphy, Thigpen, Cunningham). By the way, you can donate to this show in the link if you have more money than sense. You can follow on Insta and on Twit and can comment on these on the Boards. You can also write a 5 star review on Apple Podcasts!Theme music by Nick Nunziata, Micah Robinson, and John Makarewicz and their many bands can be heard on Soundcloud.
Everyone's got an opinion about money (especially the people with a book deal or a TV show). Some of that advice is useful. Some of it sounds better on a stage than it works in real life. Let's break it down. Important Links: Website: http://www.yourplanningpros.com Call: 844-707-7381 ----more---- Transcript: Marc: Everyone has got an opinion about money, especially people pushing a book deal or a TV show. And sometimes maybe that advice is useful and sometimes it's not, it works better on a sound stage than in real life. Let's break it down and have Tony react to some controversial financial takes here on Plan With The Tax Man. Hey, everybody. Welcome into the podcast. This is Plan With The Tax Man with Tony Mauro, here in Des Moines professional alternative at Tax Doctor, Inc. Hanging out with me to do a little reaction type podcast this week, Tony, we'll get your take on some interesting hot takes from some financial talking heads out there and see what you think about it and practice in the real world. Because you see clients and help people every day and of course are governed and have rules that you have to follow where a lot of these talking heads don't, they can say whatever they want. We'll talk about that a little bit this week. How are you doing, buddy? Tony Mauro: I've been doing good. As were taping this, we're getting into our tax season so getting busy with a lot of new tax changes and whatnot that's hitting everybody. Marc: Yeah, a lot of changes with the OBBBA. You got to be on your toes, right? Tony Mauro: Mm-hmm. Marc: And we talked a lot about that on some of the prior podcasts. Tony Mauro: We did, yeah. Marc: Yeah. If you guys aren't a little sure about some of those things, make sure you go check those out and you can find us at whatever podcasting app you like, Plan With The Tax Man. Just type that in the search box or just go to yourplanningpros.com. But if you need some help, of course, reach out to Tony as tax season is upon us again at yourplanningpros.com. All right. My friend, let's dive in and have some fun with these. Tony Mauro: Sure. Marc: All right. You're probably familiar, maybe a lot of our listening audience is with Robert Kiyosaki. A number of years back, he wrote Rich Dad, Poor Dad. Really good book, actually. Quite helpful. Tony Mauro: [inaudible 00:01:51] yes. Marc: Yeah, quite helpful for a lot of people. But he's since gotten a lot more aggressive and interesting in some of his stances and takes. And again, a lot of that is the demographic I think he's marketing himself to and pushing and things of that nature. But let's talk about this take here more recently. He said people shouldn't work for a company and save in that retirement plan, instead should launch their own startups or maybe buy gold, silver, and Bitcoin, or all of the above. At the time we're talking, Tony, it's early February and gold and silver and Bitcoin, we're doing pretty good last year and earlier into the year this year, but not so great right this minute. At the time we're talking, there was a recent 30% downturn in gold and silver so that didn't age so well. Tony Mauro: No. And I think it's interesting you pick this one because I have read his books and I think by and large the Rich Dad, Poor Dad, especially the Rich Dad, Poor Dad Cashflow Quadrant are great books for people. And this strikes me because... Don't get me wrong, I like people being in business for themselves. We serve a lot of those businesses. Marc: Absolutely. Tony Mauro: And the tax planning and accounting capacity and the financial end as well. Marc: But I bet they got their own SEPs and things, they've got their own retirement accounts they're doing. Tony Mauro: We've got them in almost anybody that will listen and take us up on it, whether it's through us or somebody else. Yes, they have their own retirement plan of some kind. Marc: Yeah. Not saving in a retirement plan just seems crazy, especially if you are working for somebody else, Tony. Because if nothing else, take the free money. Tony Mauro: It's free money. And that's exactly it, it's free money if you're working for somebody else. I think depending on who he's trying to market this measures to, not everybody is cut out for having a business for themselves. They may be good at it but they don't... A lot of them tend to get themselves into trouble, whether it's tax-wise or lack of planning, lack of cash flow, that kind of thing, let alone the headaches. Again, I love small business. It's my favorite thing so it's somewhere deep in me. I say, I get it. I get what you're saying. Yeah, I think everybody should work for themselves but not... Marc: Everybody doesn't have the right temperament though. Tony Mauro: They don't. They don't. They don't have the right temperament. And I definitely think if they're working for themselves or if they're working for a company, they should be in a retirement plan of some kind. Marc: Yeah. And to just invest in gold, silver, and Bitcoin, come on, that's crazy. Have some if you want but... Tony Mauro: I agree. That goes against every financial prudent planning aspect that I know of, that's some diversification... Marc: 150 years? Tony Mauro: Yeah. Marc: Right. Tony Mauro: Like you say, you can have some but I think you've got to have some diversification, you got to have a plan. I'd love to hear what his rationale for that. Marc: Well, I've watched some shorts and some reels he's had out there recently. And I do think he's targeting the younger generation right now, this kind of mindset of we're not going to work 50 years for somebody and then retire, we want to make all our money in our 20s by being aggressive in technology and this, that, and the other. I think he's pandering a little bit to that crowd. Maybe not. Maybe he's totally on board with it. But it just seems like a big departure from some of his previous stuff. Tony Mauro: It does. Yeah, it's a real departure from his books. Marc: Yeah. Anyway, interesting hot take there. Look, if you want some gold and some silver and some Bitcoin, hey, cool. Talk with your advisor about that, make sure being prudent though to Tony's point. Don't get crazy. We were joking the other day. I was talking with an advisor, Tony. The Dow just hit 50,000 at the end of last week at the time we're taping this for the first time ever, right? And the comment was, "Hey, the Dow hit 50,000." And somebody goes, "Yeah, so did Bitcoin." Of course, it started at 100,000. Tony Mauro: Right. Right. Marc: Because it's not had a very good couple of weeks. Tony Mauro: No. And that just goes to show you the volatility there. Marc: Massive, yeah. Tony Mauro: Yeah. Having all your eggs in those three baskets, definitely very aggressive. Marc: It could be, for sure. Yeah. All right. Let's go to a different take here from Suze Orman, host of Women and Money, recently suggested and this is... If Robert was getting a little crazy and aggressive, Suze is maybe getting a little too conservative. Tell me what you think about this, Tony. She suggests retirees set aside three to five years worth of living expenses. Not six months, right? Not three to five months. Just in case bank accounts crash or stock market crashes, things of that nature. Three to five years, a little too conservative? What do you think? Tony Mauro: In my opinion, yes. I think that's far, far too conservative because assuming, again, if you're a retiree and you have a diversified portfolio, hopefully if you are in stocks that are high yielding, good quality individual companies. But most people don't have that, they have mutual funds and a variety of things. And even in a market downturn, if you look at 3, 5, 10-year periods, there's not very many that last very long. And if you take it in 10-year periods, there never is over the entire period so that seems very, very conservative. And who in their right mind is going to take a large chunk of their portfolio and stick it in a 2%, 3% yielding vehicle when they're trying to live off of the income? I don't know where she's coming from with that at all. And again, these people sell a lot of books and whatnot. But keep in mind, I always like to point out that... And they have a lot of followers, they've made a lot of money. But sometimes if you're listening to some of this stuff, you might want to bounce it off your financial advisor as well, just see what they think because I don't agree with that one at all. Marc: Yeah, it's a little too... And again, if you got... I don't know. I guess if you're worth $100 million, putting aside three years worth of money is a little easier than most folks, right? Tony Mauro: Right. Right. Marc: It's three years. I can hardly put side six or eight months, let alone three years worth. And again, interesting takes. And of course, these folks are talking heads out there in the landscape and pushing their books or their programs or things. And while technically, Tony, doing a podcast makes us a talking head, we're a smaller talking head. Tony Mauro: True. Marc: But again, you're in the trenches. You're a CPA, a CFP, an EA, you work with clients day in and day out. These folks don't do that so that's a little different there. Tony Mauro: No. Yeah. Marc: Kevin O'Leary and his amazing suits, his very colorful, interesting suits he wears. This one might be the most realistic, Tony, of everything on my list today. And this one is still a little bit too much, I think. But what do you think? He insists that if you don't know your net worth at all times, you're being irresponsible with money. He promotes constant tracking, optimization, and performance measurement. Tony Mauro: Somewhat I agree with him because I do think you need to know your net worth. Marc: Indeed. Tony Mauro: Now, at all times and if you don't know it, you're irresponsible. Marc: Constant? Tony Mauro: I think that's a little extreme. Marc: A little much. Yeah. Tony Mauro: Yeah. But I think the point he's trying to make, if I'm reading it right, is you need to track your spending and what you own and what you owe so you do know your net worth because it is an important number. I wouldn't get so hung up on it day to day because you're just not going to be able to make significant changes to it. I think it's worth looking at with your financial advisor to see where it's headed on a yearly basis for sure. We do it with our clients. Every one of our clients, we go over that net worth. Did we grow it? Did it go backwards and why? And it's good to have that because at the end of the day, a large portion of that net worth is going to be your retirement portfolio, your investments. And so that's going to be what we're focusing on mostly. But also in that net worth, we see a lot of times where we start to become almost a financial personal coach in that, "Hey, your net worth is not growing because you're spending more than you're making." That kind of thing. I think he has some good points there but I wouldn't focus on it. I would focus more with your advisor on the month to month, the bigger plan, and I think you'd be fine. Marc: Yeah. And I think a lot of times people do hire a professional, Tony, because they don't want to track it every day and keep an eye on it and it stresses them out. But I think most people, we should know our baseline numbers, we should have a good idea of what's going on, our total net worth, what's coming in, what's going out. You want a good understanding. Even if you do have a financial professional in your pocket helping you out, you still want to have a good... What is it? A 10,000-foot view kind of thing. But I think micromanaging it down to that small of a level, maybe at some point in life. But I think as we get a little older, we're like, "Okay, I need to turn this over to somebody else to handle this because it's too stressful." Tony Mauro: Right. Agreed. Marc: All right. I got two more I'm going to do and it would not be complete doing this list without old Dave Ramsey. Dave is not shy and no stranger to controversial takes like cutting up credit cards or paying exclusively in cash. And obviously, Dave has got a huge empire, helps a lot of people, and actually has a lot of good things that do seem to work on the debt side. However, on this side, Tony, this might be a little crazy. He's challenging the rule of thumb, the 4% rule. He's advocating for 8% annual withdrawal for retirees who invest 100% in the market. If over time the S&P 500 yields a 10% rate of return, he says the money should then last you throughout retirement. And while on the surface, that makes sense, 100% in stocks for retirees alone just seems like way more nausea and sleepless nights than most people probably want. Tony Mauro: I would agree with you. I've read Dave Ramsey's books, I think one of his best is the Total Money Makeover. As far as getting yourself started with planning, I think that's a great book for everybody. Marc: And the snowball thing works great. Tony Mauro: It works great. This, I would agree with you too. I don't agree with him at all there. I do like a little bit more aggressive withdrawal percentage than 4%, I like to use 5% with most of my clients unless they're very conservative. But 8% and all in stocks, that would be... I think as a fiduciary, that would just be wrong of us to even assume that unless the client comes and says, "This is what I want. I want nothing else." And it's up to us to say, "Wait a minute, that's too much." Because what he doesn't say here is, yes, over time it yields 10%. I would agree with that but that time period is a long time period. What happens if you've got all of your retirement portfolio, S&P 500 index, let's say, and we have an eight-year prolonged downturn? Will you run out of money? Probably not, but you will have significantly less. And if you're living off the income, well, then you either have to take less or get into the principal. Marc: And he doesn't really talk about, "Hey, are you willing to cut that back on the down years and things of that nature?" Because adding a little context to that, Tony, to your point, somebody could be listening and go, "Hey, man, the market last year finished at 18%. The year before that, 20 something. The year before that, 20 something. The year before that, 20 something. Making 10 back and only pulling out 8 totally seems doable the last four or five years. Why not?" Sure, you're right. But what about the 10 years where we made nothing? What about a few decades back when there was what? 15 or 18 years where it made nothing, right? Tony Mauro: Made nothing, right. I remember through 2000 to 2000 almost 10. Marc: Oh, the lost decade. Yeah. Tony Mauro: Oh, just a whole decade was gone. Let's say you were following this strategy then and that wouldn't have been too good for you. Marc: You're pulling 8% out of a million dollars, you're pulling 80 grand out year over year, and it's not making anything back. Again, it's a little too much, I think. Tony Mauro: I think so too. I think he might be just trying to generate a conversation there but I think he definitely got to put some context to that. Marc: Yeah, for sure. And again, while technically the numbers technically do make sense, can you sleep at night with that much risk? And it flies in the face of everything for people... And again, the fact that he even mentioned it for retirees is what kind of... If he would have said people in their 30s or 40s, I could have maybe rolled with that. But people in their 60s up, that's a little too crazy. Tony Mauro: I agree. Marc: All right. Final one. You might have thought that might have been the wildest take but I'll save this one for last. The world's richest man, Mr. Musk, predicts that advances in AI, energy, and robotics will generate such an abundance of resources, Tony, that all individual retirement savings will become irrelevant in the future. On a recent podcast, he said, "Don't worry about squirreling away money for retirement. In another 10 or 20 years, it won't matter anyway." There's going to be this boom that is going to just bring riches to everyone and the thing is I actually think he believes it. I will give him the credit and the benefit of the doubt saying I think that he thinks these things are true, that he can make these things happen or they're going to happen or whatever. And kudos for feeling about that. But man, there is so many holes I can punch into this. First of all, Tony, what is your thought on will it even generate that sort of money? And then who allocates it? Who doles it out? Tony Mauro: Well, that's what I was just thinking [inaudible 00:15:10] Marc: And who do you trust to make sure they don't take it and give it to you? Tony Mauro: Yeah, this is nirvana. I'm thinking, "Well, boy, if that's the case, sign me up." Marc: Heck, yeah, sign us all up. Tony Mauro: [inaudible 00:15:21] Marc: But the history of human beings have... Is there any company, person, government, anything that you would trust to say, "Oh, send me my universal check every month so I don't have to do anything." I know that's the world keeps thinking we're moving towards that but we have to be on it. Who is going to really trust someone to do that first and foremost, right? Tony Mauro: I agree. I just think that's... I didn't even know where he's coming from with that. I do think he believes it because I heard... Marc: I do. I really do. Yeah. Tony Mauro: But I just don't see how that's possible. Everybody that either... Let's say AI and energy and robotics have taken over everything, those are the people that are going to have... Who create that I would think are going to have the money and I don't know how that's going to be doled out to the rest of the people and why. Marc: Well, you're talking about what? They've been kicking around that universal income for everyone kind of thing, right? Tony Mauro: Yeah. Marc: And if you're having a computer, if you're having AI dole out the money where so therefore humans aren't touching it, therefore it's deemed fair. I guess you could make those arguments. But at some point, it just seems... All right, 20 years from now he's talking. If you're 60 years old right now listening to this and you stop, right? You stop, saying, "You know what? Elon is totally right. He's going to pull this off. This is going to happen. I'm 60. I'm not going to save another dime for retirement for the next 20 years." And 20 years comes by and you're 80 and none of this came to fruition. Well, you're screwed. Tony Mauro: You're screwed. Yeah, you're in real trouble. Marc: And he's not on the hook for it. Tony Mauro: No. I would say to everybody, you keep doing what you're doing, you plan like we're in this world right now. Marc: Exactly. Tony Mauro: And if something like this in your lifetime ever comes to happen, well then all the better. But I wouldn't bank anything on something like this. Marc: And that's where I think the questions and the interesting thing comes into the speculation of investing, right Tony? That's where it comes back to, "Hey, look, if you want to get in crypto, if you want to have some AI properties, if you want to do some of these different things because you believe in this interesting future possibility. Cool, do that. But don't risk the tried and true things that have also worked for 150 years just in case you're wrong because there's you, there's your spouse, there's your heirs to think about." And so I think that's where we... We're in this interesting space where it's like, "I want to take some chances maybe." Or, "I want to be on some cutting edges." But let's still keep it within that speculative portion I guess, Tony, of our finances. Tony Mauro: Yeah, very small. Very small speculative portion because that's exactly what it is. And you certainly don't want to, just like you said, risk your future on some of the speculation. Because some of it is out there and... Marc: And it may be possible. It may absolutely be possible but it also may not. Tony Mauro: It may be possible. Marc: [inaudible 00:18:16] I'm still waiting on my flying car. I ain't got it yet. Tony Mauro: I've got a client here locally, tax only, that has... He's the same way. He is invested in some Iraqi Dinari that he keeps saying that it's going to take off, it's going to be... He's been telling me this for 20 years and it's basically worth 3/10 of one cent. You don't want to get into that. I think it was a little flyer for him, I don't even know. But anyway, please consult with advisors before you do any of these kind of things and [inaudible 00:18:53] Marc: And again, it's easy for the world's richest man to be like, "Well, if it doesn't work, well, whatever." Tony Mauro: Yeah, whatever. Marc: Well, he's going to fly off to Mars and not be responsible anyway. Tony Mauro: That's right. Marc: But look, good stuff, fun for conversation. And I think that's a piece too, I think as humans, we're always looking to try to move forward and do some things. And of course, sometimes we're trying to sell some stuff. And of course, even in Elon's case, he's trying to promote his robotics and his AI and get people on board. And the more people that are interested and on board, the better the chances of things happening and generating. You always have to take stuff with a grain of salt and you could simply say, "Well, Mark, you're constantly saying, Hey, call Tony." Yeah, I am. I'm saying call Tony to get a strategy and a plan in place that works for your situation based on the things you've got going on in your life, and also they're backed by years of research and data. And there's no plan that's perfect but having a plan is better than having no plan. Tony Mauro: That's right. I agree totally. Marc: Yeah. Get yourself onto the calendar, have a consultation and a conversation with licensed professionals, CPA, CFP, EA. It's what Tony is for 30 plus years. If you need some help, find him online at yourplanningpros.com. That's your planningpros.com. We're going to wrap it up this week so thanks for hanging out with us here on Plan With The Tax Man, with Tony Mauro. Tony, thanks for engaging and having some fun with me on this. Tony Mauro: All right. We'll see you next time. Marc: We'll see you next time here on the podcast. Securities offered through Avantax Investment Services SM, member FINRA, SIPC. Investment advisory services offered through Avantax Advisory Services. Insurance services offered through an Avantax affiliated insurance agency. Investment strategies discussed in this episode may not be suitable for all investors. Please consult with a financial professional.
Payman chats with Amber Aplin, who's carved out something genuinely different in the Scottish Borders. From military dentist to biomimetic practice owner, Amber's journey takes in Germany, Iraq, private equity, and ultimately building a practice that puts prevention and patient education at its core. She talks candidly about the realities of military life, the loneliness of early practice ownership, and why she now trains therapists and other dentists in minimally invasive techniques. There's also a refreshing honesty about perfectionism, work-life balance, and what happens when you stop chasing the next big thing and start appreciating what's already there.In This Episode00:00:40 - Military beginnings 00:02:05 - Sandhurst training 00:03:55 - Germany posting 00:06:50 - Iraq deployment 00:09:25 - Leaving the forces 00:10:45 - Moving to Scotland 00:12:30 - Early practice ownership struggles 00:15:20 - Private equity involvement 00:19:10 - Buying the practice back 00:22:15 - Building a biomimetic practice 00:26:40 - Therapist-led model 00:31:20 - Teaching and courses 00:36:45 - Microscope dentistry 00:42:10 - Direct bonding techniques 00:48:25 - Patient communication 00:53:30 - Practice culture 00:58:15 - Work-life balance challenges 01:04:20 - Pascal Magne influence 01:09:40 - Preventive dentistry philosophy 01:15:50 - Social media approach 01:21:35 - Business versus clinical focus 01:26:45 - Blackbox thinking 01:28:50 - Fantasy dinner party 01:30:15 - Last days and legacyAbout Amber AplinAmber Aplin is a biomimetic dentist and practice owner in the Scottish Borders who served six years as a military dentist, including deployments to Germany and Iraq. She now runs a prevention-focused practice where therapists deliver the majority of patient care, and teaches minimally invasive dentistry techniques to other practitioners.
In this Season 3 episode, co-hosts Valerie Mirko, Partner at Armstrong Teasdale LLP and leader of the firm's Securities Regulation and Litigation Practice, and William Nelson, Director of Public Policy and Associate General Counsel at the Investment Adviser Association, break down a timely set of regulatory and legislative developments shaping today's securities landscape.The conversation begins with a recent House Financial Services Committee hearing, A New Day at the SEC: Restoring Accountability, Due Process, and Public Confidence, and why many in the industry have welcomed the hearing as an opportunity to reinforce transparency, accountability, and adherence to the SEC's core mission - particularly in the Commission's rulemaking and enforcement processes.Valerie and William also discuss the SEC's recent January 30, 2026 statement on tokenization, highlighting how the Commission is thinking about the application of the federal securities laws to traditional asset classes as new technologies reshape market infrastructure. The episode wraps up with a look at FINRA's rule modernization initiative, including a proposed update to the outside business activities rule, and how FINRA's efforts are aligning with broader SEC and congressional priorities.A must-listen for securities lawyers, compliance professionals, regulators, and others navigating a rapidly evolving regulatory environment.Recent Past Episodes of this Series:A Study in Contrasts: Innovation and Crypto versus the Crypto Fraud Landscape (1/21/2026)A Year of Change, Challenges, and What Comes Next (12/17/2025)When Washington Stops: What the 2025 Shutdown Means for the SEC and Congress Going Forward (11/19/2025)The SEC's New Direction: Enforcement and Governance in Focus (10/22/25) From Memecoins to Custody: What Firms Need to Know About Crypto (9/24/25)Corp Fin in Flux: What the SEC's Latest Moves Mean for Issuers and Investors (8/13/25)Please note, the positions and opinions expressed by the speakers are strictly their own, and do not necessarily represent the views of their employers, nor those of the D.C. Bar, its Board of Governors or co-sponsoring Communities and organizations.
In this episode, we dive into Ontario's sweeping police corruption probe following the arrest of seven Toronto officers on charges ranging from drug trafficking to leaking intel to organized crime. We also explore GM's risky bet on unproven lithium manganese-rich battery technology as it attempts to revive its struggling EV business. Plus, in our Big Picture segment: Carney and Ford discuss election strategy, Air Canada suspends Cuba flights amid a fuel crisis, Instagram tests a Snapchat competitor, and much more…
You can't be a suburb of nowhere.And that means that Downtowns are important to communities, including Louisville. Jeff O'Brien, executive director at the Louisville Metro Cabinet for Economic Development, made that point during Access Louisville: Heart of the City, a live event put on by Louisville Business First on Feb. 5 at the Baird Conference Center at 500 W. Jefferson Street. The event doubled as a live recording of the Access Louisville podcast. Lee Weyland, of Core Real Estate, Hank Hillebrand, of the Poe Cos., and Rebecca Fleischaker, of the Louisville Downtown Partnership were on the show as well. Louisville Business First Senior Reporter Joel Stinnett moderated the discussion.The panel spoke about the importance of development in Louisville's urban core, not just in downtown but also NuLu, Butchertown and elsewhere. It was a particularly timely discussion considering all the recent news on new developments.On Tuesday, Feb. 3, Louisville-based Poe Cos. announced it had officially signed a letter of intent to purchase the Humana Building at 500 W. Main St. and convert it into a 1,000-room hotel. (Business First exclusively reported Poe Cos. plans on Dec. 12.) And only a few weeks ago Business First reported that Indianapolis-based Ghoman Group has secured franchise approval to bring a JW Marriott hotel to the 26-story 401 S. 4th St. Tower — formerly the Brown & Williamson Tower — at 401 S. Fourth St.So we weren't short on things to talk about. Access Louisville is a weekly podcast from Louisville Business First. You can follow it on popular podcast services including Apple Podcasts and Spotify, which are linked above.
Nick and Justin get inundated with deep sea creeps. Post show song: POWERING, from the brand new THE LUCKY NIGHTSTICKS album RECOGNIZER (Nunziata, Murphy, Makarewicz). By the way, you can donate to this show in the link if you have more money than sense. You can follow on Insta and on Twit and can comment on these on the Boards. You can also write a 5 star review on Apple Podcasts!Theme music by Nick Nunziata and Steve Murphy and their many bands can be heard on Soundcloud.
Senator Lindsey Graham is everywhere on TV promoting a bill he claims would end sanctuary cities and jail officials who obstruct federal immigration enforcement. But Tara isn't buying it.
In today's episode of iGaming Daily, SBC Media Manager Charlie Horner is joined by SBC Managing Editor Jessica Welman as the duo discuss the growing uncertainty around Maine's proposed online casino market, the wider implications of prediction markets regulation in the US, and reflect on key industry moments in Jessica's final episode as Managing Editor as she sadly departs SBC.Tune in to today's episode to find out:Why Churchill Downs is taking the Maine regulator to court and what's really behind the lawsuitWhether Maine's online casino plans are now in serious jeopardyChurchill Downs' complicated history with iGaming and why it continues to resist expansionWhat the legal challenge could mean for other US states considering iCasino regulationHow shifting federal sentiment around prediction markets could reshape the US gambling landscapeHost: Charlie HornerGuest: Jessica WelmanProducer: Anaya McDonaldEditor: Anaya McDonaldLearn how Optimove's Positionless Marketing is changing how iGaming teams operate. Discover how operators are using Optimove's Positionless Marketing Platform to launch personalized CRM campaigns, dynamically change casino lobbies and bet slips, and create engaging gamified experiences. Learn more at optimove.com.To see how this approach comes to life, Optimove Connect returns to London on March 11 and 12, 2026. It is the only user conference where marketers from around the world share real-world results of Positionless Marketing driving efficiency and ROI. Register at connect.optimove.com.Remember to check out Optimove at https://hubs.la/Q02gLC5L0 or go to Optimove.com/sbc to get your first month free when buying the industry's leading customer-loyalty service.And finally, we wish Jessica all the very best in her new endeavours, she'll be hugely missed, but we can't wait to see what she does next.
More of the timeline reveals itself to us while we also dive in to determine what happens to Astros rival!Today's StorytellersBobChuckJeremyJayToddIntro and Outro music from the track Headshot courtesy of Nicolas Jeudy and DARK FANTASY STUDIO
Nick and Justin catch one of them ass darts. Post show song: FADE ME OUT, from the recent BROWNWALL album POPPING A SQUAT FOR THE HOLIDAYS (Nunziata, Murphy, Makarewicz, Robinson). By the way, you can donate to this show in the link if you have more money than sense. You can follow on Insta and on Twit and can comment on these on the Boards. You can also write a 5 star review on Apple Podcasts!Theme music by Nick Nunziata and Steve Murphy and their many bands can be heard on Soundcloud.
Armando Salguero joins the show! Super Bowl LX is set: Seattle Seahawks (-4.5) vs. New England Patriots - Sunday, February 8, 5:30 on NBC On the college football side, Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer receives a shocking C+ grade for his first season — sparking major debate across the SEC. Is that fair criticism, unrealistic expectations, or straight-up disrespect for a coach stepping into the impossible post-Saban era? Auburn makes a statement with an 88–82 rally past Texas, and the momentum is real! We break down what Auburn's win actually means, how sustainable this run looks heading into March, and whether this team has the makeup of a national champion. Charles Barkley publicly picked Arizona to WIN the NCAA Tournament. Is Chuck seeing something everyone else is missing, or is this classic Barkley chaos? Our daily 4 Downs! FOLLOW TNR ON RUMBLE: https://rumble.com/c/c-7759604 FOLLOW TNR ON SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/7zlofzLZht7dYxjNcBNpWN FOLLOW TNR ON APPLE PODCASTS: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-next-round/id1797862560 WEBSITE: https://nextroundlive.com/ MOBILE APP: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/the-next-round/id1580807480 SHOP THE NEXT ROUND STORE: https://nextround.store/ Like TNR on Facebook: / nextroundlive Follow TNR on Twitter: / nextroundlive Follow TNR on Instagram: / nextroundlive Follow everyone from the show on Twitter: Jim Dunaway: / jimdunaway Ryan Brown: / ryanbrownlive Lance Taylor: / thelancetaylor Scott Forester: / scottforestertv Tyler Johns: /TylerJohnsTNR Sponsor the show: sales@nextroundlive.com #SEC #Alabama #Auburn #secfootball #collegefootball #cfb #cfp #football #sports #alabamafootball #alabamabasketball #auburnbasketball #auburnfootball #rolltide #wareagle #alabamacrimsontide #auburntigers #nfl #sportsnews #footballnews Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week's episode is a must-listen as our brother from another mother Jabari Davis joins the show as guest co-host, and we waste no time diving into everything happening around the NBA. We kick things off with our thoughts on NBA Rivals Week, asking the big question: Was it a Heated Rivalry… or just Lukewarm Competition? Did the matchups deliver real intensity, or was the hype louder than the product? From there, we break down the latest league headlines, including:Giannis Antetokounmpo expected to miss 4–6 weeks and what that means for Milwaukee moving forwardDerrick Rose being honored in Chicago as the Bulls retire his jersey — reflecting on his legacy and impact on the cityA surprising shift during NBA All-Star Weekend, as we discuss why the TNT crew didn't reveal the All-Star starters like they traditionally doThen we roll into our signature segment, Say Less, where we take notable NBA soundbites and translate what's really being said:LeBron James addresses recent stories and rumored comments involving Jeanie Buss and his standing as a LakerWarriors GM Mike Dunleavy Jr. responds to Jonathan Kuminga's trade demandMike Brown shares his thoughts on the New York Knicks' recent strugglesAnd we close with Rich Paul, everyone's favorite agent, weighing in on his former client Ben SimmonsInsightful, opinionated, and full of league-wide context — this episode delivers real hoops talk with no filler.You don't want to miss this one.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-baseline-nba-podcast--3677698/support.Visit: https://prizepicks.onelink.me/LME0/CLNS and use code CLNS and get $50 in lineups.This show was sponsored in part by Raycon: Visit https://buyraycon.com/baseline for 20% off new buds!Get NBA League Pass: https://link.nba.com/LP19MG Looking to book a vacation? Our travel partner Exquiste Travel & Tours has you covered: Call 954-228-5479 or visit https://exquisitetravelandtours.com/Discover our favorite podcast gear & shop our studio must-haves on our Amazon Affiliate page! https://www.amazon.com/shop/19mediagroupWant to join the conversation or invite us to your platform? Budget-friendly collaborations welcome! https://bit.ly/19GuestFollow The Baseline on X: https://twitter.com/nbabaselineFollow The Baseline on IG: https://instagram.com/nba_baseline
The hour opens with Mark, Kim, and Ethan discussing Wednesday's weather and traffic, setting up the day's top stories. They preview upcoming interviews with Mary Vogt on student loan fraud and media bias, while touching on Trump's economic messaging and the stock market's performance. The discussion shifts to central bank digital currency and its potential risks, followed by Nicole Murray's business updates, including Boeing deliveries, Alton Steel closure, and regional developments. The hour closes with a roundup of unusual news stories, airline policy changes, and lifestyle tips. Hashtags: #Economy #CBDC #LocalNews #BusinessUpdate #MarcCoxMorningShow #MarketNews #ConsumerNews
UNLOCKED! We're diving into Microscope - A Game of Epic Histories; talking through the basics of playing the game and discussing how to use it to create a setting for your World of Darkness games! Check it out! https://www.patreon.com/BlankBodies http://blankbodies.com our theme is: Millions of Dead Cyborgs - Paralyze https://paralyzeevm.bandcamp.com/track/millions-of-dead-cyborgs Portions of the materials are the copyrights and trademarks of Paradox Interactive AB, and are used with permission. All rights reserved. For more information please visit worldofdarkness.com.
TSN Maple Leafs Reporter Mark Masters joined OverDrive to discuss the headlines around the Maple Leafs, the atmosphere for the roster, William Nylander's middle finger, Auston Matthews' views on the team, Mitch Marner's return to the city and more.
Are today's diabetes medications actually treating the disease, or just managing symptoms? In this episode, renowned diabetes educator Gary Scheiner breaks down the fast-growing world of GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Mounjaro – explaining what they do, who they're for, and why they're so effective… As the owner and clinical director of Integrated Diabetes Services, Gary has devoted his career to improving the lives of people with insulin-dependent diabetes. Living with type 1 diabetes since 1985, he is an award-winning Certified Diabetes Care and Education Specialist, a master's-level exercise physiologist, and was named 2014 Diabetes Educator of the Year by the American Association of Diabetes Educators. He's also the author of several foundational books, including Think Like a Pancreas, Get Control of Your Blood Sugar, and The Ultimate Guide to Accurate Carb Counting, and is a frequent speaker at national and international diabetes conferences. Jump in now to find out: The importance of finding a healthy balance when managing diabetes. What makes GLP-1 medications unique. How diabetes impacts food digestion. What elevated glucose levels do to the rest of the body. To keep up with Gary and his work, follow him on LinkedIn!
Nick and Justin turn their favorite blankets into murder masks. Post show song: PANTS, from the recent THE LUCKY NIGHTSICKS AND FRIENDS album HOMER 2 (Nunziata, Murphy, Wylie, Makarewicz, Robinson). By the way, you can donate to this show in the link if you have more money than sense. You can follow on Insta and on Twit and can comment on these on the Boards. You can also write a 5 star review on Apple Podcasts!Theme music by Nick Nunziata and Steve Murphy and their many bands can be heard on Soundcloud.
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136: Total Self-Trust: The Missing Link Between Burnout and Alignment with Kyle Emanuel BrownWhat if the voice you've been ignoring is the one that actually knows the way?In this powerful conversation, Kyle Emanuel Brown shares how a near-death health collapse forced him to confront the truth about burnout, hustle culture, and misplaced confidence—and led him back to something far more powerful than motivation: total self-trust.Kyle breaks down what self-trust really is (and what it's not), why high achievers often lose it, and how reconnecting with your deeper awareness can dissolve fear, burnout, and the constant need for external validation.⏱️ TIMESTAMPS 00:00 – Episode Preview 02:00 – “I am the universe pretending to be human”04:20 – The 2019 near-death health collapse that changed everything07:30 – When “mind over matter” stops working10:45 – Hustle culture vs soul-fueled confidence14:10 – Growing up spiritually gifted as a man18:30 – The 4 main clairs + why we're all “clair-omni”22:50 – Shamanic training, psychedelics, and animal medicine27:40 – The E.M.P.O.W.E.R. process for total self-trust33:10 – How to trust yourself after making “mistakes”36:30 – Microscope vs telescope thinking (powerful daily tool)40:10 – Why joy and playfulness are signs of enlightenment
The Washington Roundtable is joined by Robert Kagan, a historian and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, for a conversation about the pressures facing American democracy, the security of elections, and how these domestic tensions interact with the collapse of international norms. Nearly a decade after his prescient 2016 column for the Washington Post, “This is How Fascism Comes to America,” Kagan contends that the U.S. has moved beyond the warning and into a full democratic crisis. “There is no chance in the world that Donald Trump is gonna allow himself to lose in the 2026 elections, because that will be the end of his ability to wield total power in the United States,” Kagan says.This week's reading: “The Minnesota War Zone Is Trump's Most Trumpian Accomplishment,” by Susan B. Glasser “What It's Like to Be Trump's Closest Ally Right Now,” by Sam Knight “A D.H.S. Shooting Puts Portland Back Under the Microscope,” by James Ross Gardner “Jay Powell, the Prepster Banker Who Is Standing Up to Trump,” by John Cassidy “How Donald Trump Has Transformed ICE,” Isaac Chotiner “How Colombia's President Reached an Uneasy Détente with Donald Trump,” by Jon Lee Anderson “Iran's Regime Is Unsustainable,” by Robin Wright “The Supreme Court Gets Back to Work,” by Amy Davidson Sorkin “The Lights Are Still On in Venezuela,” by Armando Ledezma “How Marco Rubio Went from “Little Marco” to Trump's Foreign-Policy Enabler,” by Dexter Filkins The Political Scene draws on the reporting and analysis found in The New Yorker for lively conversations about the big questions in American politics. Join the magazine's writers and editors as they put into context the latest news—about elections, the economy, the White House, the Supreme Court, and much more. New episodes are available three times a week. Tune in wherever you get your podcasts. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Nick and Justin gain scars now from watching this film then. Post show song: POST HISTORIC, from the upcoming BROWNWALL album BROWNWALL 7 (Nunziata, Murphy, Padula, Robinson). By the way, you can donate to this show in the link if you have more money than sense. You can follow on Insta and on Twit and can comment on these on the Boards. You can also write a 5 star review on Apple Podcasts!Theme music by Nick Nunziata and Steve Murphy and their many bands can be heard on Soundcloud.
As 2026 begins, Contagion Podcast reflects on 2025, a year that tested global public health systems and reshaped how we think about infectious diseases, trust, and preparedness. In this special year in review episode, hosts Jackie Sherbuk and Vivian Vega examine the most consequential infectious disease and public health stories of the year—placing outbreaks, policy decisions, and scientific breakthroughs into clear clinical and societal context.The episode begins by confronting one of the defining challenges of 2025: erosion of public trust in public health institutions amid leadership upheaval, funding cuts, and widespread misinformation. Against this backdrop, long-controlled diseases returned with force. Measles resurged across the United States and Europe, threatening elimination status and exposing the consequences of falling vaccination coverage. Influenza surged early and intensely, straining hospitals and disproportionately impacting children and older adults. Other vaccine-preventable diseases—including pertussis and polio—reemerged, reminding listeners that immunity gaps anywhere can place everyone at risk.Beyond vaccines, the hosts explore global crises such as widespread cholera outbreaks driven by conflict, displacement, and climate-related flooding; ongoing tuberculosis transmission, including a major U.S. outbreak; and the expanding geographic reach of mosquito-borne diseases like dengue, chikungunya, and West Nile virus. They also discuss how viral hemorrhagic fever outbreaks, while limited in case numbers, continue to stress-test public health response systems worldwide.Importantly, the episode closes on hope. Breakthroughs such as twice-yearly lenacapavir for HIV prevention represent a paradigm shift in prevention and equity. Historic progress toward eliminating mother-to-child transmission of HIV, syphilis, and hepatitis B demonstrates what sustained investment and coordinated care can achieve. Above all, the hosts honor the resilience and dedication of healthcare and public-health professionals who continue to protect communities amid uncertainty.This episode offers a thoughtful, candid look at 2025—and a reminder that preparedness, communication, and trust remain our most powerful tools.Dr. Vega would like to thank her friend Job Meiller for his musical contributions, "One," and "Imagine," to our major segment breaks. Thank you, Job!Thanks also to Dr. Ana Velez, our artistic contributor, for her artwork utilized in our episode thumbnails.
By the late 1940s, the National Institute of Infantile Paralysis had raised millions of dollars to pay for patient care and laboratory research. But polio cases were reaching record levels, and scientists were no closer to a cure. Frustrated by the slow progress, Basil O'Connor resolved to recruit fresh talent to the cause. He soon found what he was looking for in a young and energetic researcher named Jonas Salk.In 1951, Salk began testing a killed virus polio vaccine on monkeys in his Pittsburgh lab. His research soon put him at odds with the leading polio scientist Albert Sabin, who wanted his own live virus vaccine formula to prevail. As their rivalry escalated, Salk prepared to take the risky step of testing his vaccine on human subjects.Be the first to know about Wondery's newest podcasts, curated recommendations, and more! Sign up now at https://wondery.fm/wonderynewsletterListen to American History Tellers on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Experience all episodes ad-free and be the first to binge the newest season. Unlock exclusive early access by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial today by visiting wondery.com/links/american-history-tellers/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
With Mike McCarthy meeting the Giants, the crew plays out what the interview really needs to cover and what answers could actually change minds. The focus stays on McCarthy's staff plan, how he would keep up defensively with modern offenses, and whether he can restore real on field accountability after too many Giants lapses. The conversation widens into full Harbaugh watch, with John Harbaugh framed as the Juan Soto of the coaching market and the clear prize everyone is waiting on. Calls weigh in on how Giants fans would react to a McCarthy hire, fears of settling if Harbaugh goes elsewhere, and what kind of staff Harbaugh would build for a young quarterback like Jaxson Dart. The segment also veers into a heated debate on teams threatening season ticket holders over secondary market sales, with Evan arguing it is unfair for long suffering fans to take losses for years and then get blocked from finally making money back when a team gets good.
The show opens with a preview of the Miami Hurricanes' CFP semifinal matchup against Ole Miss and what's at stake for the Canes. Joe shifts to the Dolphins, addressing recent criticism, the GM search narrowing to four candidates, and the urgent need for a talent upgrade while praising standouts like center Aaron Brewer and a motivated Bradley Chubb. The discussion also highlights Mike McDaniel's innovative offense and the pressure on Miami's early draft picks to deliver. The segment wraps with coaching talk, including Brian Flores resurfacing in head coaching conversations and Ryan Fitzpatrick's candid comments questioning Flores' leadership style after his tenure in Miami.
State Sen Trey Stewart joins Aaron as they discuss the fraud going on in Maine. Visit the Howie Carr Radio Network website to access columns, podcasts, and other exclusive content.
Laura K. Field discusses her book, Furious Minds, which dissects the thought of MAGA intellectuals (yes, there are some). Anti-enlightenment, theocratic, racist, misogynistic and yet, claiming to be for the general good. Get up to 30% off OneSkin with the code MONACHAREN at https://www.oneskin.co/MONACHAREN #oneskinpod