Podcasts about nahas

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Best podcasts about nahas

Latest podcast episodes about nahas

96.1 FM WSBT Radio
South Bend Cubs vs. Beloit Highlights 4-26-25

96.1 FM WSBT Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2025 9:39


South Bend Cubs starting pitcher Ryan Gallagher made his third professional start against the Beloit Sky Carp in a mid-afternoon game at a somewhat windy Four Winds Field. Gallagher came out sharp, retiring the first eight batters he faced consecutively before allowing an infield hit. That infield single eventually came around to score in the top of the third inning, tying the game at one apiece. The South Bend Cubs had gotten on the board early, plating a run in the bottom of the first. Jefferson Rojas led off with a single and later scored when Ariel Armas lined a base hit to left field for an RBI single off Beloit starter Jake Brooks. In the bottom of the third, the Cubs threatened again, loading the bases after Armas was hit by a pitch. Edgar Alvarez followed with a single over the infield, scoring Ivan Brethowr and Andy Garriola to give South Bend a 3–1 lead. Armas was thrown out at the plate trying to score on the same play, ending the rally. Gallagher kept the momentum going with a scoreless top of the fourth, but ran into trouble in the fifth. He gave up two runs before being replaced by reliever Joe Nahas. The Sky Carp tied the game at 3–3. In the top of the sixth, Nahas struggled early, allowing the first two batters to reach base. He then committed a balk, moving the runners to second and third with nobody out. Colby Shade doubled to right field, scoring Ryan Ignoffo and moving Yiddi Cappe to third, giving Beloit a 4–3 lead. Michael Snyder followed with a single to left field, scoring both Cappe and Shade to extend the Sky Carp lead to 6–3. After the damage, Nahas managed to get the Cubs out of the inning by inducing an inning-ending double play to stop the bleeding. In the top of the seventh, Johzan Oquendo came in to relieve Nahas. He walked the bases loaded but stood strong under pressure, managing to keep the Sky Carp from scoring any more runs and keeping the Cubs within striking distance. In the bottom of the eighth, the Cubs made a strong push, hitting two rockets, one of which was snagged in the outfield and the other stopped by a great play in the infield. The Cubs were unable to get anything going, as the Sky Carp defense held firm, preventing a rally from forming. In the top of the eighth, Cubs pitcher Sam Thoresen struck out the side, keeping the Cubs in the game. However, while warming up for the top of the ninth, something happened, forcing him to leave the game before he could pitch the inning. Marino Santy came in to relieve Thoresen but struggled, issuing a few walks. The Sky Carp capitalized, scoring a run to extend their lead to 7–3. The Cubs made a last-ditch effort in the bottom of the ninth, loading the bases with two outs. However, a ground out ended the game, and the Sky Carp secured a 7–3 victory. On a positive note, Edgar Alvarez had his first multi-hit game of the season, showing promising signs of consistency at the plate. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Full Time with Meg Linehan: A show about women's soccer
Sean Nahas interview: Inside the North Carolina Courage's process

Full Time with Meg Linehan: A show about women's soccer

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 27:56


On this week's Full Time Focus, host Jilian Sakovits sits down with North Carolina Courage head coach Sean Nahas. The two talk candidly about the Courage's challenging start to the season and the importance of trusting the process, especially when things aren't going your way. Nahas opens up about how the Courage can get the best out of Jaedyn Shaw, why he's taking a break from social media, and his deep admiration for Pep Guardiola. PLUS: Later on, Amelia Lopez, of the Our Futbol podcast, joins the show to help shine a light on the LigaMX Femenil playoffs, which began this week. Who are the players and storylines that you need to know? And which teams are primed to win the 2025 Clausura title? _______________Mentioned on the show: Olympic gold medalist Lauren Holiday joins North Carolina Courage NWSL team ownership groupUSWNT midfielder Jaedyn Shaw reflects on trade to Courage: ‘I just wanted to be playing a certain style'_______________HOST: Jillian SakovitsGUESTS: Sean Nahas, Amelia LopezPRODUCER: Theo Lloyd-HughesVIDEO PRODUCER: Lia GriffinEXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Emily Olsen_______________Get in touch: fulltime@theathletic.comFollow on Instagram and TikTok: @tafulltimeSubscribe to the Full Time newsletter hereVisit the Yahoo Women's Sports hub here Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Full Time with Meg Linehan: A show about women's soccer
Sean Nahas interview: Inside the North Carolina Courage's process

Full Time with Meg Linehan: A show about women's soccer

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 30:11


On this week's Full Time Focus, host Jilian Sakovits sits down with North Carolina Courage head coach Sean Nahas. The two talk about the Courage's challenging start to the season and the importance of trusting the process, especially when things aren't going your way. Nahas also talks about how the Courage can get the best out of Jaedyn Shaw, why he's taking a break from social media, and his deep admiration for Pep Guardiola. PLUS: Later on, Amelia Lopez, of the Our Futbol podcast, joins the show to help shine a light on the LigaMX Femenil playoffs, which began this week. Who are the players and storylines that you need to know? And which teams are primed to win the 2025 Clausura title? _______________ Mentioned on the show: Olympic gold medalist Lauren Holiday joins North Carolina Courage NWSL team ownership group USWNT midfielder Jaedyn Shaw reflects on trade to Courage: ‘I just wanted to be playing a certain style' _______________ HOST: Jillian Sakovits GUESTS: Sean Nahas, Amelia Lopez PRODUCER: Theo Lloyd-Hughes VIDEO PRODUCER: Lia Griffin EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Emily Olsen _______________ Get in touch: fulltime@theathletic.com Follow on Instagram and TikTok: @tafulltime Subscribe to the Full Time newsletter here Visit the Yahoo Women's Sports hub here Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

METRO TV
Jalani Ritual Adat Pernikahan, Pemuda Tertvsuk Badik - Headline News Edisi News MetroTV 5312

METRO TV

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 2:16


Sebuah peristiwa tragis terjadi di Kabupaten Maros, Sulawesi Selatan, saat seorang pria meninggal dunia ketika menampilkan tarian adat Angngaru dalam rangkaian acara adat pernikahan. Ketika tampil di hadapan calon mempelai pengantin, korban menari sambil menusuk-nusukkan badik miliknya ke arah dada. Nahas, badik tersebut justru menusuk tubuhnya sendiri hingga korban terkapar dan meninggal dunia.

Nuus
Nahas Angula bring hulde aan Nujoma

Nuus

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2025 0:43


Die land is geruk deur die nuus van die dood van stigterspresident Sam Nujoma. President Nangolo Mbumba het by die Nujoma-woning in Windhoek hulde gebring en gesê Nujoma het geen moeite ontsien om Namibiërs van alle vlakke van die samelewing te motiveer om 'n land te bou wat hoog sal staan onder wêreldnasies nie. Hier is sy aankondiging voor 5-uur vanoggend.

Nuus
Nahas Angula bring hulde aan Nujoma

Nuus

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2025 0:34


Kry die nuus soos dit breek.

College Soccer Nation
College Soccer Nation S5E23: Interview with UNC Head Coach Damon Nahas

College Soccer Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2025 85:50


The coaches are back with a special interview with NCAA Coach Damon Nahås of the National Champion UNC Tar Heels. Give a listen, tell a friend.

Keluar Sekejap
EP 138 | Titah Addendum Wujud, Sambutan Krismas KPKT | Nahas Kenderaan Berat

Keluar Sekejap

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2025 69:06


Audio Siar Keluar Sekejap episod 138 bersiaran buat kali pertama untuk tahun baru 2025 antara lain membincangkan tentang keputusan Mahkamah Rayuan berhubung rayuan Datuk Seri Najib Razak berkenaan Titah Addendum. Episod ini juga menyentuh mengenai sambutan perayaan Krismas yang diadakan di salah sebuah kementerian yang telah tular dan menjadi isu hangat media sosial serta kejadian kemalangan melibatkan kenderaan besar yang semakin kerap berlaku akhir-akhir ini sehingga menimbulkan kerisauan orang ramai. Bagi yang berminat menaja episod Keluar Sekejap untuk 2025, boleh hubungi +601119191783 atau emel kami di tajaan.ks@gmail.com.

METRO TV
Nahas! Kali Ancol Telan K0rb4n, Pencarian Masih Berlangsung - Headline News Edisi News MetroTV 4555

METRO TV

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2025 2:18


Dua warga Pademangan, Jakarta Utara, t3ngg3l4m di Kali Ancol, Jakarta Utara, pada Rabu sore. Keduanya sempat meminta tolong kepada warga sekitar sebelum akhirnya t3ngg3l4m. Peristiwa tersebut terjadi sekitar pukul 17.30 WIB di Kali Ancol, Jalan R.E. Martadinata, Pademangan, Jakarta Utara. Tim Basarnas Jakarta dan Damkar Jakarta Utara, didampingi pihak kepolisian, langsung melakukan pencarian. Saksi mata sekaligus warga yang membantu kedua k0rb4n, Agung, mengatakan tidak mengenal keduanya. Namun, kronologi dimulai saat ia mendengar seseorang meminta tolong. Naas, saat mengulurkan tangan, kedua k0rb4n sudah t3ngg3l4m.

Shadows in the Limelight
#60 - Jay Vigon and Margo Nahas (Album Cover Artists)

Shadows in the Limelight

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2024 49:39


Jay Vigon and Margo Nahas are the guests on the podcast this week! Jay and Margo are artists that you don't know you know. If you can picture the artwork for the iconic 1984 Van Halen album or Prince's font, you are picturing the work of Jay and Margo. With client lists that include the names of Warner Bros, Sony Music, Microsoft, and Universal just to name a few, these two have made their mark on the entertainment industry with their 50+ year careers. Check out their work by clicking on the links below.Margo's 1984 Van Halen site: Click HereMargo's Instagram: Click HereJay's website: Click Here

Carolina Insider
Belichick introduced, LaSalle preview, Hubert Davis joins, Clare Gagne & Damon Nahas from WSOC join

Carolina Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2024 91:28


Bill Belichick met the public as Carolina's new football coach on Thursday...thoughts on the press conference (3:38)Tar Heel basketball is back in action by hosting LaSalle in the Smith Center on Saturday...we preview the match-up with the Explorers (21:21)Checking in with Hubert Davis (presented by CR Legal Team) (26:55)Double women's soccer guests as goalkeeper Clare Gagne (38:26) and head coach Damon Nahas (52:10) both join to discuss winning the national championship (52:10)Plus: 5SecondChallenge (1:07:46), Carolina FB soon to be a big TV draw (1:15:13) and a feel-good Holiday Kids Clinic story (1:22:08) See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Way of Champions Podcast
#407 Anson Dorrance Pt. 2: Another NCAA Title, the New UNC Coaching Regime, and the Importance of Love in Your Coaching

Way of Champions Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2024 82:34


On November 14, 2024, we interviewed 22 time NCAA Champion Coach Anson Dorrance from University of North Carolina Women's Soccer. At the time the Tar Heels were in the midst of another winning season, and Dorrance had resigned his head coaching duties, handing the reigns to interim coach Damon Nahas, Asst. coach Tracy Leone and GK Coach Chris Ducar. As the third assistant coach, Dorrance fulfilled a role he had never done before, and 24 hours prior to us recording this podcast, we witnessed the Tar Heels become NCAA Champions for the 23rd time! In this most timely of interviews, we discuss the championship with Anson, the qualities of the new coaching staff (Nahas was named Head Coach just prior to the championship game), the importance of love in your coaching, and so much more. This is as close as it gets to conducting an hour long on field interview with a national champion! If you have not yet listened to Part 1 of our talk, check out Episode 403.  PUT IN YOUR BULK BOOK ORDERS FOR OUR BESTSELLING BOOKS! Programs such as UNC soccer and lacrosse, Syracuse lacrosse, Stanford Lacrosse, Middlebury College, Colby College, Rutgers University, and many other champions are using THE CHAMPION TEAMMATE book with their athletes. Many of these coaches are also getting THE CHAMPION SPORTS PARENT so their team parents can be part of a successful culture. Schools and clubs are using EVERY MOMENT MATTERS for staff development and book clubs. Are you?  We have been fulfilling numerous bulk orders for some of the top high school and collegiate sports programs in the country, will your team be next? Click here to visit John's author page on Amazon Click here to visit Jerry's author page on Amazon Please email John@ChangingTheGameProject.com if you want discounted pricing on 10 or more books on any of our books. Thanks everyone. NEW WOC MASTERMIND AND CERTIFICATION PROGRAM IS SOLD OUT! Our 2025 Mastermind and Certification Program is sold out, but we do have a waitlist as well as a collection of coaches who are interested in being part of our next cohort. If you want to take a deeper dive then ever offered before into your coaching and personal development, or work within your school or club improving coaching or transforming the culture, or you want to hit the road as a speaker and presenter working with teams and youth sports organizations, we will give you the tools and support to do so. We are collecting names who are interested at this moment in joining the waitlist or being the first to know when we offer another program, you can do so by clicking here and adding your name and email to the list. This week's podcast is brought to you by our friends at Sprocket Sports.  Sprocket Sports is a new software platform for youth sports clubs.  There are a lot of these systems out there, but Sprocket provides the full enchilada. They give you all the cool front-end stuff to make your club look good– like websites and marketing tools – AND all the back-end transactions and services to run your business better so you can focus on what really matters – your players and your teams. Sprocket is built for those clubs looking to thrive, not just survive, in the competitive world of youth sports clubs.  So if you've been looking for a true business partner – not just another app – check them out today at https://sprocketsports.me/CTG. Become a Podcast Champion! This weeks podcast is also sponsored by our Patreon Podcast Champions. Help Support the Podcast and get FREE access to our most popular online courses, a $300 value. If you love the podcast, we would love for you to become a Podcast Champion, (https://www.patreon.com/wayofchampions) for as little as a cup of coffee per month (OK, its a Venti Mocha), to help us up the ante and provide even better interviews, better sound, and an overall enhanced experience. Plus, as a $10 per month Podcast Super-Champion, you will have access to never before released and bonus material, including: Downloadable transcripts of our best podcasts, so you don't have to crash your car trying to take notes! A code to get free access to our online course called “Coaching Mastery,” usually a $97 course, plus four other courses worth over $100, all yours for free for becoming a patron. Other special bonus opportunities that come up time to time Access to an online community of coaches like you who are dedicated listeners of the podcast, and will be able to answer your questions and share their coaching experiences

Morning Footy: A daily soccer podcast from CBS Sports Golazo Network
Women's College Cup: UNC claims their 23rd title (Soccer 12/11)

Morning Footy: A daily soccer podcast from CBS Sports Golazo Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2024 12:33


UNC Head Coach Damon Nahas and player Tessa Dellarose join the show to talk about their victory over Wake Forest in the final of the Women's College Cup to secure UNC's unprecedented 23rd title. This was UNC's 28th appearance in the finals and their all-time record in the College Cup is 153W - 18D - 5L. Nahas discusses the roster changes from last season and what made this season in particular so memorable. Dellarose discusses all the advice she has received from older players. Morning Footy is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Morning Footy podcast on Twitter: @CBSSportsGolazo, @susannahcollins, @nicocantor1, @NotAlexis, @CharlieDavies9 Visit the betting arena on CBSSports.com for all the latest in sportsbook reviews and sportsbook promos for betting on soccer For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ Watch UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Europa Conference League, Serie A, Coppa Italia, EFL, NWSL, Scottish Premiership, Argentine Primera División by subscribing Paramount Plus: https://www.paramountplus.com/home/ To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Morning Footy: A daily soccer podcast from CBS Sports Golazo Network
Interview: Sean Nahas on NC Courage, Quarterfinal playoff matchup, and embracing the moment (Soccer 11/08)

Morning Footy: A daily soccer podcast from CBS Sports Golazo Network

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2024 12:07


The Morning Footy crew welcome in NC Courage coach Sean Nahas into the show as his club gets ready for their NWSL Quarterfinal matchup against the Kansas City Current. The group discuss what's different about this season and playoffs vs last year, the rejuvenation of Ashley Sanchez, and strategy going into the KC match. Morning Footy is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Morning Footy podcast on Twitter: @CBSSportsGolazo, @susannahcollins, @nicocantor1, @NotAlexis, @CharlieDavies9 Visit the betting arena on CBSSports.com for all the latest in sportsbook reviews and sportsbook promos for betting on soccer For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ Watch UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Europa Conference League, Serie A, Coppa Italia, EFL, NWSL, Scottish Premiership, Argentine Primera División by subscribing Paramount Plus: https://www.paramountplus.com/home/ To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

SOUNDFOOD
INTERCONNECTIVITY OF THE SACRED with Mel Nahas

SOUNDFOOD

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2024 55:40


We are thrilled to welcome the multidimensional Mel Nahas back to the pod.  As the co-founder of Conscious City Guide, Mel merges consciousness, human design, intuition, tea, attunement and sacred spaces, encouraging us to co-create with the universe to embody our most aligned, harmonious and authentic selves.    We Discuss The manifestation journey: Trust, surrender, and co-creation Mel's evolving journey of finding home and the magic tea house that found her Activating sacred sites and codes: Mel's: work with Matías De Stefano  The importance of human design in personal growth and decision-making Mel's profound connections to Egypt  Repairing time and realigning timelines through portal activations Nitsa and Brent's wild journey, facilitated by Mel and Matías Sacred spaces and their role in personal and collective consciousness   To attend Conscious City Guide's next event: “Sacred Sites Day Retreat at Zaca Lake,” on October 19th, head here for tickets.  Book a 1:1 Recalibration Session with Mel Nahas - Listeners receive $36 off with code: SOUNDFOOD CONNECT Mel Nahas @nahaste | consciouscityguide.com | @srimudolife Host @nitsacitrine | @soundfoodspace Subscribe to Mercurial Mail (our monthly newsletter)   MENTIONED Soundfood Ep. 58: Everything in Joy with Mel Nahas Conscious City Guide Human Design Chart Matías De Stefano Zaca Lake Sacred Sites Day Retreat at Zaca Lake Lacy Phillips Jessica Hundley Taschen "Sacred Sites" The Library of Esoterica  Palma Collective Liberate Elemental Forces Isis Indria Graham Hancock Mohammed Abdul Wahab Srimati SriMu Kariong  Esalen Mel's Recalibration Sessions - Listeners receive $36 off their sessions using code: SOUNDFOOD   SIMILAR WAVELENGTH 58: EVERYTHING IN JOY with Mel Nahas 28: IN DEVOTION with SriMati 7: HOLY DAYS with Shiva Rose and Lacy Phillips   NOURISH This podcast is nourished by your donations and the symbiotic support of our partners: LIVING LIBATIONS: enjoy 15% off all botanical beauty alchemy with this link https://livinglibations.com/soundfood(discount automatically applied) MIKUNA: enter SOUNDFOODFAMILY for 25% off regenerative plant protein from Mikunafoods.com LIVING TEA:  SOUNDFOOD for 15% off all tea nourishment livingtea.net SUPERFEAST: enter CITRINE for 10% off our favorite tonic herbs + superfoods superfeast.com OSEA: enter CITRINE for 10% off oseamalibu.com sea-to-skin magic Kindly leave us a review on APPLE or SPOTIFY means the world to us!

Tech Path Podcast
Avalanche9000 Upgrade Incoming!

Tech Path Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2024 26:03


Avalanche9000 is the largest network upgrade that Avalanche has undergone since mainnet launch, combined with the groundbreaking Avalanche consensus that gives any application near-instant finality. This upgrade will make launching your own L1 more economically feasible, simpler to customize, smoother to maintain and quicker to bring to market. With it comes the launch of highly anticipated games like Off The Grid (Gunzilla) and Pulsar. Meanwhile, the first Netflix test is getting ready to rollout as well.Guest: John Nahas, Chief Business Officer at Ava LabsAvalanche website ➜ https://www.avax.network/00:00 intro00:24 Avalanche 900003:28 Off The Grid Launching Soon05:35 is AVAX Ready?07:53 Sony Soneium vs Microsoft?08:46 Pulsar Launching on mainnet09:56 Transactions Will Explode12:56 California Law Benefits Avax14:53 First Netflix Test Soon17:44 Squid Game on Avax?18:30 Avalanche TPS vs Sui 20:29 Prediction Markets Coming To Avax23:09 Avalanche Gaming Console?25:08 outro#crypto #avalanche #avax ~Avalanche9000 Upgrade Incoming!

Conversations with Ricardo Karam
#38 جان مارك نحاس: حرب , حب و فن | Jean Marc Nahas: War , Peace and Art

Conversations with Ricardo Karam

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2024 68:26


In this podcast episode, Ricardo Karam invites you to explore the evocative world of Jean-Marc Nahas, a prolific Lebanese artist whose work is deeply intertwined with the themes of war and peace. Born in Beirut in 1963, amidst civil conflict and political turmoil, Nahas's art serves as a cathartic expression of his experiences. His unique approach to drawing, described as writing letters or poetry, reflects the scars of war that have profoundly shaped his psyche. Despite having no formal artistic training, Nahas's exceptional talent earned him a place at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, where he honed his craft before returning to Beirut. Known for his bold lines and dynamic brushwork, Nahas's art captures the intensity of his inner world. Join Ricardo Karam as he delves into Nahas's journey, his artistic process, and his enduring connection to the turbulent history of his homeland. يدعوكم ريكاردو كرم في حلقة البودكاست هذه إلى استكشاف العالم المثير لجان مارك نحاس، وهو فنان لبناني غزير الإنتاج، تتشابك أعماله بعمق مع مواضيع الحرب والسلام. وُلد نحاس في بيروت عام 1963، في خضمّ الصراع الأهلي والاضطرابات السياسية، ويُعدّ فن نحاس بمثابة تعبير تنفيس عن تجاربه. ويعكس أسلوبه الفريد في الرسم، الذي يوصف بأنه كتابة رسائل أو شعر، ندوب الحرب التي شكّلت نفسيته بشكل عميق. على الرغم من عدم حصوله على أي تدريب فني رسمي، إلا أن موهبة نحاس الاستثنائية أكسبته مكاناً في مدرسة الفنون الجميلة في باريس، حيث صقل موهبته قبل أن يعود إلى بيروت. يشتهر نحاس بخطوطه الجريئة وفرشاته الديناميكية، ويجسد فن نحاس كثافة عالمه الداخلي. انضموا إلى ريكاردو كرم وهو يغوص في رحلة نحاس ومسيرته الفنية وارتباطه الدائم بالتاريخ المضطرب لوطنه.

Nuus
Kyk gerus na belastingkoers vir pensioenarisse, sê Nahas

Nuus

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2024 0:17


Die gewysigde inkomste belasting-wetsontwerp is in die parlement bespreek en is tans by die Nasionale Raad vir oorweging. Dit bevat die wysigings aan inkomstebelasting wat teen Oktober in werking behoort te tree. Intussen het 'n raadslid vir die Rundu-landelike kiesafdeling, Paulus Mbangu, gevra dat pensioenarisse en afgetredenes van belasting vrygeskeld moet word. Volgens Mbangu is belasting op die groepe ‘n misbruik van oumense. Kosmos 94.1 Nuus het gesels met oudminister Nahas Angula, 'n Swapo-veteraan, wat sê daar moet wel gekyk word na 'n koers vir pensioenarisse.

Deans Counsel
45: Caroline Nahas (Korn Ferry/UCLA) with Tips on Managing Advisory Boards

Deans Counsel

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2024 34:22


On this episode of Deans Counsel, moderators Ken Kring and Dave Ikenberry speak with Caroline Nahas, a Senior Advisor to Korn Ferry. She has served as Vice Chairman and Managing Partner of the Los Angeles Headquarters office and North America Leader of the Consumer Practice during her career with Korn Ferry. Caroline's primary focus is consulting and advising boards on governance, succession, effectiveness and recruiting, and has been involved in a number of CEO and Board building engagements. Her clients range from private to mid-cap to the Fortune 100 in a wide range of industries.Caroline currently serves on the board of directors of DineEquity, Inc. (NYSE: DIN). She served as lead director during a CEO transition, is Chair of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee, and sits on the Compensation Committee.Active in many civic groups, Caroline is the incoming Chair of the UCLA Anderson School Board of Visitors and served as the Corporate Board Chair for the United Way of Greater Los Angeles.Considering her vast and unique experience, Caroline is perfectly positioned to discuss such topics as:-- The ins and outs and do's and don'ts of structuring a non-fiduciary board-- The importance of authenticity in the Board Chair/Dean relationship-- Instituting unity in a board composed of smart, strong-willed members-- Leveraging the board's potentialLearn more about Caroline NahasComments/criticism/suggestions/feedback? We'd love to hear it. Drop us a note at feedback@deanscounsel.comThanks for listening.-Produced by Joel Davis at Analog Digital Arts--DEANS COUNSEL: A podcast for deans and academic leadership.James Ellis | Moderator | Dean of the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California (2007-2019)David Ikenberry | Moderator | Dean of the Leeds School of Business at the University of Colorado-Boulder (2011-2016)Ken Kring | Moderator | Co-Managing Director, Global Education Practice and Senior Client Partner at Korn FerryDeansCounsel.com

Carolina Insider
FB Season preview, Maui bracket set, Damon Nahas joins

Carolina Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2024 120:08


Carolina kicks off the 2024 football season next week against Minnesota...we preview the upcoming campaign for the Tar Heels (12:41)UNC Women's Soccer interim head coach Damon Nahas joins to talk following Anson Dorrance, taking over the legendary program and the next steps for the team (41:40)Plus: the Maui bracket is set (34:58), #5SecondChallenge is BACK (1:15:26), a lesson on unincorporated land (1:41:56) & Tar Heel football raises a bunch of money for a good cause (1:51:46)See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Being Brown and Bold
Ep# 33 Sara Nahas Hormi on Being Brown and Bold Podcast with Jes Thomas

Being Brown and Bold

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2024 39:37


Sarah Nahas Hormi is my guest today!  If you are a fan of Food Network, you have seen her work. She is the queen behind the scenes on many shows as the Culinary Producer.  I met her working on Chopped during the pandemic.  She comes from a dual heritage home, and now is raising mixed culture children with her husband.  As she lives in the melting pot of NYC, she navigates culture in her home as well as in the media. I totally admire her and can't wait for you to listen to this conversation. IG: @saranhs Watch Chopped on Food Network Follow Jes on IG @jessoulfood Listen to the Being Brown & Bold Podcast on Spotify & Apple Podcast

Continuum Audio
Cranial Neuralgias With Dr. Stephanie Nahas

Continuum Audio

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2024 25:42


Cranial neuralgias comprise a distinct set of disorders typified by short-lasting attacks of intense pain in the distribution of a particular nerve in the cranium. Cranial neuralgia syndromes are rare but can be debilitating and go undiagnosed or misdiagnosed for years. In this episode, Lyell Jones, MD, FAAN, speaks with Stephanie J. Nahas, MD, MSEd, FAAN, MD, an author of the article “Cranial Neuralgias,” in the Continuum® April 2024 Headache issue. Dr. Jones is the editor-in-chief of Continuum: Lifelong Learning in Neurology® and is a professor of neurology at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. Dr. Nahas is an associate professor of neurology at Thomas Jefferson University and assistant director of the Headache Medicine Fellowship Program at Jefferson Headache Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.   Additional Resources Read the article: Cranial Neuralgias Subscribe to Continuum: continpub.com/Spring2024 Earn CME (available only to AAN members): continpub.com/AudioCME Continuum® Aloud (verbatim audio-book style recordings of articles available only to Continuum® subscribers): continpub.com/Aloud More about the American Academy of Neurology: aan.com Social Media facebook.com/continuumcme @ContinuumAAN Host: @ LyellJ Guest: @stephanieJnahas Full transcript available here  Dr Jones: This is Dr. Lyell Jones, Editor-in-Chief of Continuum, the premier topic-based neurology clinical review and CME journal from the American Academy of Neurology. Thank you for joining us on Continuum Audio, a companion podcast to the journal. Continuum Audio features conversations with the guest editors and authors of Continuum, who are the leading experts in their fields. Subscribers to the Continuum journal can read the full article or listen to verbatim recordings of the article by visiting the link in the show notes. Subscribers also have access to exclusive audio content not featured on the podcast. As an ad-free journal entirely supported by subscriptions, if you're not already a subscriber, we encourage you to become one. For more information on subscribing, please visit the link in the show notes. AAN members, stay tuned after the episode to hear how you can get CME for listening.    Dr Jones: This is Dr. Lyell Jones, Editor-in-Chief of Continuum: Lifelong Learning in Neurology. Today, I'm interviewing Dr. Stephanie Nahas, who has recently authored an article on cranial neuralgias in the latest issue of Continuum on headache. Dr. Nahas is a neurologist at Thomas Jefferson University where she is an Associate Professor of Neurology and serves as Assistant Program Director of the Headache Fellowship program there. Dr. Nahas, welcome, and thank you for joining us today. Dr Nahas: Thanks for having me. Glad to be here. Dr Jones: So, for our listeners who are new to Continuum, Continuum is a journal dedicated to helping clinicians deliver the highest possible quality neurologic care to their patients, and we do so with high quality and current clinical reviews. Dr. Nahas, your article is a perfect example of that - it's full of really helpful (and I think clinically relevant) recommendations for neurologists who take care of patients with cranial neuralgias. And now that at this moment (during this podcast interview), you have the attention of a huge audience of neurologists - what's the one most important practice change that you would like to see in the care of these patients?  Dr Nahas: I would like to see the recognition of these cranial neuralgias and related syndromes as distinct and overlapping with other primary headaches much more often. I think far too often, clinicians will try to pigeonhole these headache and facial pain diagnoses and try to make just one diagnosis the main one, and any other symptomatology that comes along with it – “Oh, that's just a weird part of your primary syndrome, right?” I know I've fallen into this trap a number of times, because mostly what we see in a headache clinic is going to be migraine, so we kind of have a laser focus towards migraine-type symptoms (and we know migraine can do just about anything). So then when we hear a little bit about a facial pain, a little bit about some sort of neuralgia, we just try to wrap it up into migraine - but that's not always necessarily the case. You know, we know that any person on the planet can have as many diseases as they darn well please, so why not ascribe two diagnoses when it's appropriate? That can lead to better treatment outcomes, in fact. If you are focusing your treatment on two distinct, but overlapping, entities, you tend to get better results, because the treatments may not be identical (and they rarely are). Dr Jones: And that's a great example of it's Occam's razor on one side (there's one problem) versus - what is it, Hickam's Dictum? Dr Nahas: Something like that. Dr Jones:  - where you can have as many problems as the patient wants to have, so I think that's a great example of that. And, earlier, in the same issue on headache, we do have a wonderful article by Dr. Deb Friedman, who walks through that really important history component of trying to, you know, determine which headache syndrome the patient is dealing with (which is obviously a prerequisite for the diagnosis and management) - so that's a great point. So that's the one takeaway - recognition of cranial neuralgias as a distinct entity. Keep it in mind – otherwise, we'll miss it. Is that right? Dr Nahas: You got it. Dr Jones: Okay, good. If we learn nothing else, we'll take that away. So, speaking of the history, Dr. Nahas, for many pain syndromes (including these), the history is really paramount in establishing the diagnosis for patients, specifically with trigeminal neuralgia. How do they usually describe that pain to you?  Dr Nahas: The whole spectrum of descriptors for trigeminal neuralgia-form pain is, actually, maybe broader than you would think, and I actually find that, sometimes, patients have a real hard time verbalizing and describing the way it feels, because it's so unusual - it doesn't remind them of anything they've necessarily felt before.  Sometimes, it can. For example, a patient who's no stranger to having lots of dental work - that pain that when they drill in or if they hit an irritated part of the tooth or the gums, that's usually kind of neuralgia form-like. But at the same time, patients will say, “It's still not quite like that. You know, it's really hard for me to explain. It's sharp and it's terrible like that, but it has a different quality.” And I think they just don't necessarily have the terminology, but I encourage them to try to be creative. You know, some of my patients will personify the pain - they'll describe as if there's some little creature in there that's clawing, or scraping, or pulling, or stabbing. Or they might use other descriptors, such as burning like a fire (like a blow torch is there). Or they may even use colors. You know, some of my patients are really creative, and I don't know if they actually have synesthesia or they're just bordering on that, but they'll describe different colors for the qualities of pain. (“Is it more red? Is it more like icy blue? Is it black or white?”) I don't hear that too often, but I do like to just open the door and let my patients describe for themselves in their own words - and if they can't have any words, I give them some examples and that usually gets the ball rolling. Dr Jones: So, a combination (like we usually do) with some open-ended questions, and then some directed ones to kind of clarify. That's really interesting, and it gives you some immediate empathy and sympathy for the discomfort these patients have to deal with, right (as when they describe it in those burning, clawing kind of terms)? Dr Nahas: Exactly, and they'll also put it into context for you - so not just describing what the quality of the pain is like, but they'll give you good examples of when they feel these symptoms, what brings them on, what alleviates them, how the symptoms may change from day to day depending on the situation or circumstance. And again, it just gives them an open door to express themselves, and it really does help to strengthen that alliance you're trying to create and maintain with your patient. You do get useful and valuable information when you just let them go on and describe things. Dr Jones: So, there are, I think, misconceptions in the popular world and also in the clinical side of care that, you know, folks will have a perception of a disorder that maybe doesn't really match reality. What do you think is a common misconception you've encountered in taking care of patients with cranial neuralgias?  Dr Nahas: The patients that I see tend not to have the clear-cut textbook descriptions  (like it's almost as if they're reading the criteria when they tell you your symptomatology) - because those cases are a little bit easier, they get identified more readily, they get appropriate treatment sooner, their disease doesn't necessarily progress and become complicated by, you know, any number of things that can happen with unmanaged neuralgia-form craniofacial pain. The ones that I see - they've been around the block several times, because maybe their syndrome isn't quite so typical. Maybe they didn't really have the terminology to be able to describe their symptoms. Maybe nobody really opened that door for them and invited them to just talk about what it is. Perhaps they, or whoever they were seeing, were more focused on diagnostic testing, and so their focus is more on, “Why is my MRI not showing anything? Why is my x-ray completely normal? You know, I have these symptoms. There must be an explanation.” Because that's what patients want - they want solutions. They have a problem, they want to know why they have it, and they want a solution to it. And they can get too focused on the hard data and ignore that it's a subjective experience that really guides us to help treat their symptoms, especially when we don't have necessarily an anatomic target to go after. (When we do, that's great.) But again, these straightforward cases tend not to come to me, because they're easier to take care of. Dr Jones: Still, just as legitimate a diagnosis, even with a normal MRI, right? I do find it's sometimes hard to kind of get around that with a patient, isn't it? Dr Nahas: Absolutely, it is. You know, they're both relieved and disappointed. I often find if we order imaging for an unusual syndrome (or even a typical syndrome) and they see that, “Well, there's nothing on this report to go for. What does that mean? Does that mean that I'm crazy? Does it mean that this is all in my head, that I'm imagining it, that I'm amplifying my symptoms somehow? Is this my fault?” You know, all this self-doubt comes in, and you have to reassure these patients that, “Yes, your symptoms are real. They are in your head, because your brain is in your head, and your brain is the source of your perception and your experience. So, let's take your symptoms at face value and let's give you treatments that are directed at those symptoms.” Dr Jones: Well said, and that's where we like to keep it, the brain inside the head. I think that was day one of neuroanatomy. I know that the treatment for many of these cranial neuralgias overlaps, right? There's some common approaches to several of these. There are some things that we put in our academic writing, but there are some things that we just kind of learn from experience. Do you have any tips or tricks that you would like to share with our listeners about the management of the cranial neuralgias?  Dr Nahas: First and foremost (and I think this kind of goes for any of the disorders in the spectrum of headache and facial pain) is you need to be patient, and you need to set up appropriate expectations that, by and large, this is a trial-and-error process where we need to introduce a therapeutic intervention gradually and titrate the dose gently to effect while following for clinical response, but also keeping an eye on what our guardrails are. What do I mean by that? Let's say, for example, we're using oxcarbazepine for some sort of neuralgia-form disorder (I mean, take your pick for any of them – it's fair game for most of these as a good initial trial). Dr Jones: Sure. Yeah. Dr Nahas: So, you want to start it at a low dose, start building it up slowly, and in addition to following for their clinical response - which I counsel them it may take a while  (even once we hit a target dose, it may take several more weeks, we've got to give it time) - you can monitor a serum level of oxcarbazepine and certain other antiseizure medicines for that matter. So, that can help guide you to know how high you can go. This is a little bit different from the situation with epilepsy, where you're checking levels to ensure that it's in a therapeutic range to make sure that it's not toxic - maybe to assess for adherence - but here, we're using it as a guide to know how much farther can we push the dose on this drug. And, of course, also, you want to be monitoring for any adverse events that can occur with that drug (such as hyponatremia, or changes in the CBC, et cetera) - so I do monitor these folks a little bit more closely than I otherwise ordinarily would, especially when I have a therapeutic intervention where I can actually monitor the drug level of it and be very, very precise in trying to maximize and optimize their treatment. Dr Jones: Got it. So, patience with each trial, and then patience that there might be (and I mean patience with a ‘c' that there might be) multiple trials – I think that's a good takeaway for all of these cranial neuralgias with pretty much all of the medication treatments, right? Dr Nahas: Yes, and I do find that in some cases, one treatment is not quite enough. Because most of the treatments we draw from our antiseizure medication category, it can get complex trying to balance two, or even three, antiseizure medicines and finding the optimal dose for each. Do we push all of them to the max? Do we say this one is the undercurrent (we just want to keep it at a low level) and these other two are going to be doing the lion's share of the work? It becomes kind of fun if you like uncertainty and if you like to be creative. If you're the type of person who likes checkboxes and checklists and cut and dried results, you know this is not the game that you want to play - but that's one of the reasons that I enjoy doing this, because I have so much freedom to be creative and really finely tailor and tune the treatment specifically to the individual patient's needs. Dr Jones: That's fantastic, and in a minute, I think we can come back to maybe what drew you to this - I'm curious to hear that. But before we get to that, you know, when we think about the medications that are available (and again, your article does a phenomenal job summarizing the therapeutic approaches to the cranial neuralgias) - what do you see on the horizon, Dr. Nahas, for the care of these patients?  Dr Nahas: I want to see a lot more research being done in this population of patients and across this spectrum of disorders. What makes it so hard is because they are somewhat rare, and because they very often co-occur with another primary headache disorder - so that makes it extraordinarily difficult to create a research study on a population that's so heterogeneous, right? That's, I think, the biggest challenge - is that we have so little to guide us other than our own clinical experience. There are not a ton of clinical trials for any of these disorders. I think one in particular that can be both underdiagnosed and overdiagnosed is occipital neuralgia - and I mentioned before that I, myself, have found myself falling into this trap of once I see a signal for migraine, I just call everything migraine, right? And, sure, with migraine, there can be allodynia in the scalp, and oh, sure, we all hear that if you push on something sore, you can have some lancinating pain. Oh, that occipital neuralgia that somebody told you about? No, no, that's just part of your migraine. You don't actually have occipital neuralgia. Well, you know, if you look at clinic-based studies (there's one in particular that I cited), most of the presentations of occipital neuralgia actually co-occurred with another headache diagnosis (either primary or secondary), and very commonly, it was migraine or probable migraine or chronic migraine. And why this is important is because you need to validate for these patients that they do have more than just migraine. They have a separate problem that, yes, it's interrelated, it's interconnected, they can influence each other - but we might have to treat them both differently. So, you have your suite of migraine treatments which might not include an antiseizure medication. Then, for the occipital neuralgia, maybe you are pulling in an antiseizure medication, or maybe you're focusing more on peripheral nerve blockade or physical therapy - or even considering a surgical referral, because as surgical treatments for nerve decompression or ablation or other interventional procedures also continue to evolve, that helps to give us some more hope in giving  these patients more relief with fewer complications. I'd also like to see some more creative solutions, not just more antiseizure medicines, not just more targeted anatomic interventions. But, hey, is there a role for some other peptides or neurotransmitters that we just haven't identified yet? Might some novel treatment approaches actually be useful for some of these patients? And, you know, again, how do we get at those answers? It's going to be challenging, because the patients - while they're out there, they're not really a homogeneous group, and the results from a particular study might not be so generalizable. Dr Jones: And we've seen such great success in the world of migraine, right (looking for novel targets) And so it would be nice to transport that over to the cranial neuralgias, right? Dr Nahas: Yes, absolutely. Dr Jones: Yeah. We should always be mindful of disparities in care of patients who have neurological problems. Are you aware of any literature around the care of these patients related to health care disparities that our listeners should be aware of? Dr Nahas: Nothing focused specifically on disparities in this population or subpopulations within this population (based, for example, on ethnicity, or race, or socioeconomic status). You're looking for subpopulations within a huge population, almost like a needle in a haystack - not quite that difficult, but again, it takes a lot of effort and diligence to try to find these individuals and then to get them to agree to enroll in some sort of research study, even if it's just a survey study or doing interviews with them trying to understand their symptomatology better. It can be quite challenging. And then again, let alone designing a rigorous clinical trial for these folks - who, again, such a heterogeneous presentation - and the willingness to participate in a placebo-controlled trial for pain that can be so heinous can be very, very challenging. You know, we've seen this as a challenge with cluster headache, too - not just because of the nature of the disease (when the cycles come and go somewhat unpredictably). But these folks aren't necessarily willing to forgo treatment for the purposes of a clinical trial - I mean, many are, and I thank them - this is another one of the reasons that research is really lacking in some of these rarer syndromes. Dr Jones: So, another part of the rationale for more investigation for these uncommon and probably underserved disorders. So, Dr Nahas, I know caring  for patients with craniofacial pain, I imagine it can be challenging. I can imagine it's also pretty rewarding as well. What drew you to this work, and what do you find most exciting about it?  Dr Nahas: Well, what brought me to headache to begin with was kind of random chance, and really, it revolves around mentorship. When I very first started as a neurology resident, Dr. Silberstein took me under his wing and wanted to turn me into a headache specialist (that was one of his goals). And, thankfully, he was successful, although he didn't really have an easy job of it, because back then, I didn't really see or understand how studying headache and facial pain could really satisfy that hunger that I have to understand the brain and the nervous system. I mean, that's why I became a neurologist in the first place, right? (I think that's why most of us did.) You know, not only are we drawn to medicine to help people and be altruistic and to study a fascinating topic, but particularly with the brain and the nervous system - I mean, this is what makes us human. This is what's so fascinating to me. And until I started to learn more about headache, I thought the best way to really learn about brain function is through disease (such as stroke or epilepsy, or movement disorders, cognitive disorders, degenerative disorders). This is how we learn, right? This is what I was taught, at least in college and med school. And then you get to the real world of actually practicing medicine or being in training. You start talking with these folks, and you hear their stories and how distinct they are from the textbooks. And again, when you invite them to really describe their experience, you see the human side of it, and you listen to them describe their symptoms - and you start to imagine yourself, what's really going on in their brain and their nervous system for them to experience that? So you start reading a lot of the literature about cortical spreading depolarization and how that can activate the trigeminal system and sensitize it - how that might be linked to the expression of aura (for example) - then, you can actually really parse out the anatomy and understand why somebody experiences those symptoms when you understand the anatomy. And there are just countless examples of this - about how studying the symptoms and what brings them about, what the pathophysiology is, and then what the treatment is, how that really informs our understanding of how the brain functions - that's really what's kept me excited about this. That, and again, forming relationships with patients and sometimes being the first person who ever just sat down and listened to them and let them talk, and they really feel like they're cared about and like they're important - because they are. I think far too often, patients with headache and facial pain disorders are stigmatized, and they're left feeling like it's not worth it trying to get better, that there is no solution. Society has beat them down, the medical system has let them down, and they just want to give up. Then, when we can finally sit and listen and give them some hope, and they see some improvement - the transformation that occurs right before your eyes is extraordinarily gratifying. Dr Jones: So, it's fascinating, and you can help people - and I can't think of a better advertisement for headache fellowship for all those neurology trainees out there.  Well said, Dr Nahas. So I've got one more question for you before we close. And I know that the headache community, including yourself, are very strong advocates for your patients and for more research (as we've talked about today) into headache disorders, understanding the pathophysiology, developing better treatments. What is it about purple hair? I've seen several headache specialists (and maybe someone on this call) post online some purple hair. What's the story behind that? Dr Nahas: A number of years ago, as part of advocacy efforts, we recognized there's got to be a way to really improve the awareness of such a common condition, of headache in general. It affects so many people, it almost becomes, again, brushed off. We say headache, it's just a nuisance. Well, no it's not. It's actually fascinating as part of the human condition. One of the things we needed was a color - our signature color - and we chose purple. We know that we share this color with other advocacy groups, but it's a great color, it's eye-catching, and you can utilize it in a number of different ways. One of the early ways was people dressing up in all kinds of purple garb - putting purple makeup on, purple sunglasses, purple tutus, purple T-shirts, and even purple wigs. A lot of us have been donning purple wigs for advocacy and for awareness efforts, particularly for events (such as Miles for Migraine, for example) - but some of us have been so bold as to not just put on a purple wig, but to actually go to a salon, bleach the hair, and dye it bright purple. I have at least one male colleague who also did this to his beard. Last year, we did it together at the same salon, took a bunch of pictures to post about. It really created a big splash online and for our social media efforts and outreach, and it caught on. Lots more people now are thinking about dying their hair purple. One of our current fellows actually did it this year. At our center, we have about 30 different purple wigs that we bought with some funds that we procured, and on the Shades for Migraine Day (June 21), we all went out parading around Center City, Philadelphia wearing our purple T-shirts and our purple wigs, and handing out flyers trying to raise awareness. We got a lot of strange looks, but we also got a lot of good feedback. And I think we actually reached some people who didn't realize that there's such a thing as a headache center that they could actually come and see us and get relief for this problem they thought was just a part of everyday life. That was kind of a long-winded answer, but - Dr Jones: No, that's great, and it worked. It got me to ask you about it, right? And I will say I admire your commitment and dedication. The best I could do today, Dr Nahas, was wear a purple tie, but I'm sure your patients appreciate that level of investment, too. It's really, really cool. Really impressive. Dr Nahas: Yeah. A lot of them this past year have asked me, “Where's the purple hair? I thought you were going to do it every year around this time.” And, you know, it is a bit of a commitment. Dr Jones: It's a commitment, yeah. Dr Nahas: And there's some upkeep that is required and you're kind of stuck with it for a while (unless you want to go to the trouble of reversing the process, but that's really just covering it up). I said, "We've moved beyond dying the hair. We're doing wigs, and we're thinking of the next thing.”  Dr Jones: Good for you. Dr Nahas, thank you so much for joining us, and thank you for such a thorough and fascinating discussion on symptomatic management of cranial neuralgias and such a wonderful article in the latest issue of Continuum.  Really appreciate you being here today. Dr Nahas: I can't thank you enough. It's been my pleasure.   Dr Jones: Again, we've been speaking with Dr Stephanie Nahas, author of an article on cranial neuralgias in Continuum's most recent issue on headache. Please check it out, and thank you to our listeners for joining today.  Dr Monteith: This is Dr. Teshamae Monteith, Associate Editor of Continuum Audio. If you've enjoyed this episode, you'll love the journal which is full of in-depth and clinically relevant information important for neurology practice - and right now, during our Spring Special, all subscriptions are 15% off. Go to Continpub.com/Spring2024, or use the link in the episode notes to learn more and take advantage of this great discount. This offer ends June 30, 2024. AAN members, go to the link in the episode notes and complete the evaluation to get CME. Thank you for listening to Continuum Audio.

Market Makers
NAJI NAHAS: Um dia que entrou para a HISTÓRIA da BOLSA BRASILEIRA| Corte Ep #96

Market Makers

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2024 14:04


CORTE EP #96: Roberto Lombardi, lenda da bolsa de valores, conta como foi o dia em que Naji Nahas quebrou a bolsa de valores do Rio de Janeiro.

Lagu Dari Langit Podcast ( KOTA MARUDU)
S14E6 Part 3 : Jake Paul Cari Nahas vs Mike Tyson

Lagu Dari Langit Podcast ( KOTA MARUDU)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2024 31:25


S14E6 Part 3 : Jake Paul cari nahas dengan Mike Tyson - Jake Paul cari penyakit - Kes Syabu dan Ketum di Kota Marudu - budak tertusuk besi di Kota Marudu - Alief Aziz buat hal lagi - Teka teki teka teku ⛰️ Travel to Sabah in style with @nhtravelsabah

Creative Abundance
21: A NEW stock platform for artists! Featuring Juliana Nahas

Creative Abundance

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2024 31:21


Juliana Nahas is a product photographer, stylist, and art director working with brands worldwide. She is also the founder of The Stock Shop, a new marketplace for creatives to buy and sell digital assets to enhance their designs. Today on the podcast Juliana shares with us an exclusive inside sneak peak of The Stock Shop - a curated digital marketplace for creators. “The Stock Shop is launching March 2024 and we're in the process of searching for the best global talent to join our founding artists. Creators of all kinds - photographers, designers, artists, and more - are invited to submit their work for consideration to sell on the site and founding artists will receive 50% commission on all sales. What makes The Stock Shop different from other digital asset platforms is following the launch we will be creating design challenges for specific categories that our customers are shopping for. Creators can submit their work and the community will vote on the best designs - those that rise to the top will be sold on the site. This exciting process will ensure The Stock Shop hosts the best global talent, stays ahead of the trends, and provides only high-quality products to buyers.” Connect with Juliana on IG : https://www.instagram.com/julianamary/ Apply as a founding artist for The Stock Shop * Visit https://www.thestockshop.com/ to apply as a founding artist. Founding artist deadline is February 11th! Stock Photography Academy Announcement! Don't forget to sign up for Stock Photography Academy by February 20th to get access to all the amazing workshops and challenges I'm running this year! https://www.aubreywestlund.com/stock-photography-academy (Use code ptp10 for 10% off

Attacking Third: A CBS Sports Soccer Podcast
Interview: Ashley Sanchez on her move to NC Courage | Playing for Nahas | The surprise off-season trade | Trinity Rodman relationship (Morning Footy)

Attacking Third: A CBS Sports Soccer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2024 12:25


The MF crew welcome in current North Carolina Courage player Ashley Sanchez who was an NWSL champion with Washington Spirit and was the 2016 US Soccer Young Player of the Year. They discuss how she's settling in with her new club, the expectations for this upcoming campaign, playing for Sean Nahas and alongside other veterans, and the surprise of being traded unexpectedly. And finally, they group touch upon her relationship with former Spirit teammate and USWNT player Trinity Rodman. Morning Footy is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Morning Footy podcast on Twitter: @CBSSportsGolazo, @susannahcollins, @nicocantor1, @NotAlexis, @CharlieDavies9 For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ Watch UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Europa Conference League, Serie A, Coppa Italia, CONCACAF, NWSL, Scottish Premiership, the Brasileiro, Argentine Primera División by subscribing Paramount Plus: https://www.paramountplus.com/home/ To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Morning Footy: A daily soccer podcast from CBS Sports Golazo Network
Interview: Ashley Sanchez on her move to NC Courage | Playing for Nahas | The surprise off-season trade | Trinity Rodman relationship (Soccer 02/06)

Morning Footy: A daily soccer podcast from CBS Sports Golazo Network

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2024 12:25


The MF crew welcome in current North Carolina Courage player Ashley Sanchez who was an NWSL champion with Washington Spirit and was the 2016 US Soccer Young Player of the Year. They discuss how she's settling in with her new club, the expectations for this upcoming campaign, playing for Sean Nahas and alongside other veterans, and the surprise of being traded unexpectedly. And finally, they group touch upon her relationship with former Spirit teammate and USWNT player Trinity Rodman. Morning Footy is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Morning Footy podcast on Twitter: @CBSSportsGolazo, @susannahcollins, @nicocantor1, @NotAlexis, @CharlieDavies9 For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ Watch UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Europa Conference League, Serie A, Coppa Italia, CONCACAF, NWSL, Scottish Premiership, the Brasileiro, Argentine Primera División by subscribing Paramount Plus: https://www.paramountplus.com/home/ To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Attacking Third: A CBS Sports Soccer Podcast
NWSL Draft reactions | Sean Nahas on NC Courage and Ashley Sanchez | Seattle Reign rebrand | W FA Cup 5th RD Draw (Soccer 01/15)

Attacking Third: A CBS Sports Soccer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2024 57:59


Jenny Chiu, Lisa Carlin, Sandra Herrera, and Christine Cupo kick off the show by weighing in on the 2024 NWSL Draft, what it means to the players, the spectacle it has become, options for those not drafted, and debate whether or not it should still exist being that's it's "so painfully American" as Christine puts it (1:11). Then, NC Courage coach Sean Nahas is welcomed in to discuss life after Emily Fox, being on the receiving end of the surprising Ashley Sanchez trade, and what he's learned from the past that he'll take into the new campaign (14:41). Next, the group discuss the rebranding of OL Reign reverting back to Seattle Reign, the identity it brings now named after the city once again, and the timing of the announcement leading to their new bomber jacket being on full display thanks to coach Laura Harvey (30:18). And finally, with the release of the W FA Cup 5th Round schedule, the ladies discuss what matches they have their eye on, how Chelsea move on post-Sam Kerr injury, and make some predictions as well (39:42). Attacking Third is a finalist for the "Diverse Voices Award" category in the Sports Podcast Awards. Click on the link to vote for us! https://www.sportspodcastgroup.com/sports_category/sports-diverse-voices-award/ Watch USWNT, NWSL and WSL games on P+" with a link to https://www.paramountplus.com/home/ Attacking Third is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Attacking Third team on Twitter: @AttackingThird, @SandHerrera_, @LisaCarlin32, @Jordangeli , @JennyaChiu and @Darian_Jenks. Visit the Attacking Third YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/attackingthird You can listen to Attacking Third on your smart speakers! Simply say "Alexa, play the latest episode of the Attacking Third podcast" or "Hey Google, play the latest episode of the Attacking Third podcast." For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Hearts of Oak Podcast
Brigitte Gabriel - Making Sense of the War in Israel

Hearts of Oak Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2023 50:19


Show Notes and Transcript For 6 weeks we have witnessed conflict in The Middle East.  Israel have responded to the October 7th terror attack with force.  Brigitte Gabriel joins us to help make sense of this war in Israel.  As the Founder of ACT for America, Brigitte has been a well known American voice of truth for 2 decades, an upbringing in Lebanon gives her a unique perspective on The Middle East and on regional tensions.  Who exactly are Hamas? What part does religion play in this war? Can Israel win both the military and publicity battle?  Brigitte answers all of these questions and more. ACT for America: ACT NOW - TAKE ACTION https://www.actforamerica.org/  Brigitte Gabriel is a leading commentator on politics, culture, and national security. As a legal immigrant to America born in Lebanon, Ms. Gabriel survived war in the Middle East living in an 8x10 underground bomb shelter from the age of 10 until 17 years old. She lectures nationally and internationally, and her expertise is sought after by world and business leaders. Ms. Gabriel moved to Israel in 1984 and became a news anchor for “World News,” an evening Arabic news broadcast for Middle East Television seen throughout Israel, Egypt, Syria, Jordan, and Lebanon. Her work is of international scope has brought her in contact with world figures such as Margaret Thatcher, George H. Bush, Queen Nour El Hussein, Itzhak Rabine, and Shimon Perez. Ms. Gabriel immigrated to the United States in 1989 and founded a television production and advertising company. Her clients included ABC, NBC, CBS, Discovery, TLC, History Channel, CNN, the Oprah Winfrey show, 20/20, World News Tonight, and Good Morning America just to name a few. She has addressed the United Nations, Australian Prime Minister, members of The British Parliament/House of Commons, members of the United States Congress, The Pentagon, The Joint Forces Staff College, The US Special Operations Command, The US Asymmetric Warfare group, the FBI, and many others. In addition, Gabriel is a regular guest analyst on Fox News Channel, Newsmax, OAN, and many American and international media outlets worldwide. Ms. Gabriel is the Founder and Chairman of ACT for America, the largest national security grassroots organization in the U.S. with over one million members. She speaks Arabic, French, English, and Hebrew. Connect with Brigitte.... WEBSITE:            https://www.actforamerica.org/                              https://brigittegabriel.com/ X:                          https://twitter.com/ACTBrigitte?s=20&t=nsIfzJ-aNH20EjHE2tq25g                              https://twitter.com/ACTforAmerica?s=20&t=nsIfzJ-aNH20EjHE2tq25g INSTAGRAM:       https://www.instagram.com/brigitte_gabriel/?hl=en 'Rise: In Defense of Judeo-Christian Values and Freedom'  Available in hardcover, e-book or audio-bookhttps://amzn.eu/d/bLhqPWQ Interview recorded 13.11.23 *Special thanks to Bosch Fawstin for recording our intro/outro on this podcast. Check out his art https://theboschfawstinstore.blogspot.com/ and follow him on GETTR https://gettr.com/user/BoschFawstin and Twitter https://twitter.com/TheBoschFawstin?s=20  To sign up for our weekly email, find our social media, podcasts, video, livestreaming platforms and more... https://heartsofoak.org/connect/ Support Hearts of Oak by purchasing one of our fancy T-Shirts.... https://heartsofoak.org/shop/ Transcript (Hearts of Oak) Brigitte Gabriel. It is wonderful to have you back with us. Thank you so much for your time today. (Brigitte Gabriel) I'm so delighted to be back with you, Peter.  So good, and I wish we were talking about a different subject rather than what is happening at the moment in the Middle East and Israel. But first, the viewers can find you @ACTBrigitte and they can also get you on your website brigittegabriel .com, just dot com at the end. And just in case our viewers haven't come across Brigitte before she's been with us before but she is national security analyst, New York Times best -selling author and chairman of Act for America and her latest bestseller is Rise in Defense of Judeo -Christian Values and Freedom. I want to get your thoughts on, I mean there's Hamas, there's Islam, there's the Israeli response, there's Benjamin Netanyahu's political legacy, intelligence failures, international political and media response, danger of spreading, etc, etc. There's so many pieces to this. Let's see what we can unpack in the next 45 minutes. Maybe start at the I mean, October the 7th, the worst attack, I think, in modern day Israel, over a thousand citizens murdered by Hamas on that day. What were your thoughts, I guess, whenever you first saw that breaking? What were your initial thoughts? Disbelief. If I can describe it in one word, disbelief. Watching Jewish people run for their lives, being chased by Hamas terrorists, watching Hamas holding girls, running with them, the girl on the motorcycle, kids running, Hamas parading women, girls, and trucks and Jeeps. I mean, it was disbelief that this could actually happen in Israel to Israelis on Israeli territory. The first question on my mind was, what happened to security? I mean, Israel is known for the intelligence. The intelligence failure was the first and biggest question that popped up in my mind. How could this be? The intelligence failure, how did it happen? I think a lot of people worldwide were in utter shock that this happened in Israel, that Hamas, was able to pull something like this. I mean, look, you and I know people. We have followed the Palestinian problem. We have followed Palestinian news. Nobody in Gaza can pull this off. This is not brains that put this together in Gaza. So, immediately, we knew that, you know, as a terrorism analyst who's been following this for years, I knew that Iran was behind it. I mean, being born and raised in Lebanon, following the progression of Hezbollah in Lebanon, growing, becoming an army, becoming a major army, a structure, discipline, training, all provided by Iran, funding provided by Iran. I knew that Iran was going to be behind the Hamas massacre. So these are all the questions that immediately came to my mind. But again, the word disbelief is what me and many other people across the globe probably felt at that moment. Yeah, there's so many questions, and you're right. One of the reasons I really wanted you on, Brigitte, because you're having grown up in Lebanon, understanding the regional side, understanding the religious context, and now obviously living in America and seeing it from a U .S. perspective. So you bring a fascinating myriad of thoughts to this issue and you're right. My first question was how has this happened? How did the Israeli government, the intelligence services, Mossad known throughout the world for how lethal they are, for how well they conduct, for, you don't know what's going to happen until it happens and then this happens. And my thoughts were actually, if I was an Israeli citizen, I would feel fairly unsafe because that trust in those institutions seems to have gone. Is that a kind of a fair assessment? I think what led to this, this is a great lead into what led to this, because this is what happens when you take your eye off the ball. This is what happens when you start bickering with each other, forgetting that, and this applies to Israel and America, by the way, because we are experiencing the same type of division in America. But in Israel, for the last year, the Jewish people in Israel, the Israelis have felt such division. The country was so totally divided at each other's throat. They forgot that they are actually persecuted by everybody around them. Everybody around them wants their annihilation. And the Jewish people and the Israeli people in Israel forgot that you need to always be united when it comes to your security. I think their hatred towards Bibi Netanyahu, their hatred towards different aspects of government, the right versus the left, the left versus the right, the religious bloc versus everybody else. I think that division and remember I mean I heard even reservists were refusing to show up even to the reserve in the last year in Israel. So there was many problems leading to this. And this goes to show you that we are fighting an enemy who is determined to wipe Israel off the map. Just because Israel was distracted and the Israelis were distracted, bickering with each other over the court system, over the voting system, over the right versus the religious, versus the liberal, versus the left, and everybody's fighting amongst each other, Hamas did not lose sight of its goal. The Palestinians have never wavered in their hatred towards Israel. And no matter how much they bicker with each other, the Palestinians, they are united on one thing and one thing alone, and that is the killing of all the Jews and driving them into the sea. So what happened on October 7th was a wake -up call for Israelis. I think every Israeli that was living in Israel on that day, including those Jews who were visiting from all over the world, Because remember, you know, this was a holiday, Simchat Torah. Everybody was visiting with their families. They were celebrating the holiday in Israel. This is a time when everybody visits Israel. And I think this was a wake -up call for the Jews worldwide to realize anti -Semitism is real. It's not just little pockets here and there. Oh, maybe it's on the rise. I think what happened on October 7th showed all the Jews worldwide, including Israelis, that the people worldwide hate you, they are on the streets demonstrating all over the globe. Sydney, Australia, New York, Canada, whatever country, France, England, whatever country around the world, they are demonstrating against you. And this is why the Jewish people worldwide need to be united on one thing, and that is their security and preservation of their life, their faith, their state, their unity, no matter what happens, no matter how much they bicker with each other on other things, they should never take their eyes off of the security of the State of Israel. You're right, because no other country has to fight for their survival and be prepared at every, every single day. Can I ask about the response? So the response from the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been full fury, and rightly so. What is your kind of assessment as you look at that military response? Because it's a dangerous situation going into Gaza. And I think in the past, Israel have failed to deal with this. So, I mean, as you look at the military situation, how do you see that? I think good for them for showing up in force. I think this time Israel knows this is an existential threat. This is not just words like it used to be in the past. Look, Israel has never been in this situation before. I mean never Israel, before Israel when it was attacked it dealt with countries, you know, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, they were countries recognized on the world stage, right now Israel is dealing with Hamas which is a group of militia funded by Iran on the southern border and the northern border They're dealing with Hezbollah, which is not a country. It's a terrorist organization operating within a country. They have actually taken control of Lebanon, but Hezbollah is not a country and Hamas is not a country. But they are both funded by Iran, which is an Islamist country. Devoted for the wiping, for wiping Israel off the map and so good for Netanyahu for showing full force. Look, I am pro Netanyahu. because Netanyahu understands this threat. I'm not pro person per se whether in America or in Israel. So the people come and go, it doesn't matter who's serving in whatever position right now, they come and go. I started my organization Act for America in the United States, President George Bush was in power. Bush came and left, Obama came to power. Obama came and left, President Trump came to power. Got framed and left, President Biden is in power. In one year, we will no longer have President Biden in power and somebody else is going to come. So I do not look at the person in power. I look at the policies that they support and Netanyahu from the beginning all along throughout all his political career. He is a national security hawk. He is somebody that the enemies of Israel fear because they know they cannot push Netanyahu. They cannot manipulate Netanyahu. They cannot intimidate Netanyahu, the same way people throughout the world knew that leaders, corrupt leaders that they could not intimidate or or put fear into the heart of President Donald J. Trump in the United States. They did not know what he would do if he was attacked. And the same thing with Netanyahu. So I do support Netanyahu's full force going into Gaza. Good for him to doing that. And I hope that they will not have a ceasefire. Yes, there's a lot of destruction. Look, it's collateral damage. You know, Israel did not ask for this. The Palestinians asked for this. Remember, Peter, Israel left Gaza in 2005, and they took out every single Jewish person out of Gaza. I mean, remember the fights in Gush Katif when even the Jewish people did not want to leave and the Israeli IDF turned against its own people, kicking and screaming, dragging them out, taking them, evacuating Gaza in order to turn Gaza to the Palestinians. Israel not only took the Jewish people who were alive out of Gaza, Israel went in and dug the bodies out of the Jewish cemeteries of the people who were buried in Gaza because they knew what the Palestinians are going to do to the cemeteries. You and I know what they do. They have no respect for anything. So by the end of 2005, there were no Jewish people alive or dead in Gaza. Gaza could have been an oasis. Gaza could have been Singapore. The Palestinians had an opportunity after opportunity to build Gaza to become Singapore, to build Gaza to become a commercial centre. They have received billions of dollars from the world, but they did not do that. Instead, Hamas invested in building tunnels, billions of dollars that went into the Palestinian authority that Hamas siphoned. Their leaders got rich, they built tunnels instead of investing in their own people, and now they are paying the price. And that's exactly why you are seeing the level of destruction in Gaza, because Israel is not only trying to destroy the building above ground, the majority of the threat, the main threat is what's underground. And in order for you to destroy the tunnels underground, Israel has to use the force that it is using and we are seeing the level of destruction that we are seeing. And Israel has to see this through, ignoring all calls for ceasefire from anywhere else in the world. No one else in the world is calling for ceasefire, Peter. Lives in Sderot. Live in Jerusalem. They don't. So, they need to allow the people who live in these areas, who are under the attacks of Hamas, to be able to defend themselves. Of course you hear some from the international community saying those poor Palestinians living in Gaza, they're pawns of the Israelis, they are suffering under the Israelis, they have nothing, they live in a open prison and yet when you look at the international community, you're right the money that's gone in but also what has happened, I think, is a fault of the west, because the west have seen the people there living under Hamas and haven't thought of doing a thing about it. So, I mean, how do you see that? Because there are people there, but that narrative that, oh, it's all the Israelis' fault, and yet you're right. Those living there have had, certainly the government have had, every opportunity to build something special and prosperous. Look, Peter, everybody that's about, oh, the poor Palestinians, you know, Hamas is bad, but it's the poor Palestinians who are paying the price. Who do you think Hamas is? Hamas did not fly in through the breeze and latch on some tree or latch on some hospital. Hamas are the Palestinians in Gaza. They are a part of the Palestinians in Gaza. They are elected by the people in Gaza. You know, I speak in my first book titled Because They Hate. I talk about when Hamas did the first election in Gaza. Remember, Israel pulled out. They left everything to the Palestinians. So the Palestinians had their own election, their first election. One of the lady that was elected, her name was Om Nidal. She became known as the the Om Al Muqawama, the mother of the resistance. And the reason why she ran, the platform she ran on is because she has video. She sent three of her sons to die as suicide bombers. She actually, part of her campaign was showing videos of her standing next to her sons putting their suicide belt on. Sending them to Israel to blow themselves up and they did blow themselves up and they did die and they did kill Israelis. So she ran on the platform. I already gave three sons. I have another seven to give. That's why she was elected as a member of the government in Hamas. And that's just the first example in 2006. Who do people think Hamas is? Hamas are the Palestinians living in Gaza. And that's exactly why, you know, they teach Hamas controls the ministry of education. Hamas controls the ministry of health. Hamas controls the ministry of defence. Hamas control the ministry of communication. They control everything in Gaza. And who do you think works in these people? What do you think, Hamas are like five people that just parachuted into Gaza? They are all the Palestinians living in Gaza. This is the reality that the world has a very difficult problem time accepting. And here's another thing about the poor Palestinians. Where are the Palestinian voices that when the Hamas terrorists went into Israel on October 7th and kidnapped, okay, we do not want to get into the details about massacring the babies, cutting off the heads, raping women. Burning babies in ovens, etc., etc. Let's talk about the women and the children that they kidnapped and took back to Gaza. Where are the Palestinian voices saying you can't kidnap a six -month -old baby from his mom? You can't kidnap a two -year -old little girl. You can't rape women. We are mothers. We are wives. We are grandmothers We are women, you know, you can fight man to man, but you cannot rape women. You cannot kidnap children Where are the voices of the Palestinians mothers nowhere to be found as a matter of fact? What we saw was basically the girls that Hamas took as hostage, raped, and dragged as dead after they killed in the streets of Gaza, that girl was being kicked, shoved, dismantled, instead of the people saying, no, we don't do this to dead people, especially naked Jewish women being paraded down the streets. Instead, they cheered them on with such glee, with such pride. Even the Palestinians in Gaza who were part of the Hamas massacre on October 7th. I mean, who can forget the guy calling his father, Father, put my mother on the phone. You're going to be so proud. I killed with my own hands 10 Israelis. I just couldn't wait to tell you so you can be proud of me. Who are these people? These are the people of Gaza. These are the Palestinians in Gaza. This is a reflection of a decayed society from the inside. Their end goal is destruction. They celebrate murder and cutting people off and kidnapping people and raping people. They celebrate it as a joyful act. Not even the Nazis rejoiced like that. While the Nazis wanted to kill their enemies, they did not send their own children to die and then celebrated their death just to kill their enemies. The Nazis did not do that. The Nazis knew they were doing something wrong. That's why they did it in secret. That's why they shot people in the back so they don't have to look them in the eye when they kill them. It's totally different with the Palestinians. So for all the people who are crying about the poor Palestinians in Gaza, oh, the poor Palestinians paying the price, the Palestinians in Gaza are Hamas. You make your bed, you lay in it. Yeah, and it's shocking when you see that celebration of evil, the celebration of murder, the joy. It's moronic, really. Yeah. But also, when you were speaking, I was thinking, actually, there are probably many people in Gaza who know where these people are being held, these hostages, and yet there's no rush to free them or to release them. And the international community talks about a ceasefire, but release the hostages, then by all means we can have some kind of conversation, but the call of the international community is for a ceasefire. It's actually not for the release of the hostages at all. And that's really surprised me. Right, they want the ceasefire basically for the Palestinians and Israel should not have a ceasefire. Look, last time when Israel got into a war with Gaza and they had a ceasefire, Hamas kidnapped a soldier. To this day, he has not returned back to his family. That's what they do when there's a ceasefire. The international community who is calling on a ceasefire, for what? So Palestinians can escape, so they can leave. If the Palestinians can leave in four hours, which is now the pause that they're talking about, don't you think Hamas fighters can escape as well? And Israel knows this, the reality on the ground. You know, very different than the young American nitwits demonstrating on the streets, the college kids who do not know their own history in the United States, let alone the history of overseas and the Palestinian -Israeli conflict. And that's exactly why they take to the streets, they are demonstrating for the ceasefire. The ceasefire will hurt only Israel. And actually, instead of preventing bloodshed, it may prevent bloodshed in the short term. Long term, it's going to create even more bloodshed because it's going to empower Hamas. Hamas is going to dance a victory lap, hey, look, we forced the Israelis to cease fire. We are successful against our enemies. We are getting our demands. We get to keep the hostages. We don't have to give anybody back. And we get to have a ceasefire. And meanwhile, Hamas is going to use the ceasefire to move locations, to give a rest to their soldiers, to whatever it is, take a nap, move their ammunition, it all benefits Hamas, not Israel. And right now Israel needs to take care of Hamas, period. When you look over at the West Bank, you kind of see how, although it's supposedly the same Palestinian people group, and yet they don't have the same desire to murder or kill. There is that tension, of course, but actually it's amazing when you see two groups that call themselves the same, and yet one is hell bent on murder, and the other actually complains, but actually accepts that they are living beside a neighbour who they have issues with, but they get on with life. One side can get on with life, the other side can't, and that kind of contrast of the same supposed people group is quite intriguing. Well, here's the intriguing part. The people in Fatah and the Palestinians in the West Bank are looked at as a sell-out to Israel. They're not trusted by Hamas and the people in Gaza. And actually what's so interesting, Peter, is in the last six weeks. There is such infighting. This is what the media is not talking about. I think they are up now to 200 people killed in the West Bank, Palestinians on each other because the Palestinian people want the Fatah leaders to join Hamas the Palestinian people in the West Bank are now saying to each other, if you have a rifle, because you know a lot of them have rifles that they shoot at weddings and celebration. They're saying if you have a rifle you need to either use it or give it to Hamas. So don't fool yourself by thinking, oh, the Palestinian people in the West Bank are much nicer. The only reason they're much nicer is because they're not funded by Iran. They don't have a way to communicate with Iran to go kill the Jews. But rest assured, right now, they are empowered. They are inspired. They are excited. They are mobilized. They are thinking, how can we become like Hamas? How can we make a name for ourselves like Hamas? As the heroes, the brave, the Islamic fighters, instead of the cowards, the weak, the sell off to Israel. This is the talk on the Arab streets right now. And this is the talk on the Arab street, not just within the Palestinian territories, but throughout the Arabic world on the streets. Don't kid yourself. The Arabic streets are cheering Hamas because they all hate the Jews. It's not about the Palestinians. It's about hating Israel and hating the Jews. And I think a little history lesson here is very important. Remember, Peter. When the PLO was founded in 1964. When the PLO was founded in 1964, the Palestinian Liberation Organization, it was founded to wipe Israel off the map. At that time, Gaza was in the hand of Egypt with an Egyptian flag flying over Gaza, and the West Bank was in the hands of Jordan. A Jordanian flag was flying over al -Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem. So when Yasser Arafat started the PLO, the Palestinian Liberation Organization. He was not liberating Gaza or the West Bank. Those were Jordan and Egypt. So what was he liberating? He was liberating back to the line of 48, Israel proper. They did not want an Israeli state to exist in the Middle East. But most people do not know their history. Most people ignore history. The history is boring. It's not interesting, but you know, somehow it's fashionable today in any country in the West. Not just in our country, not to teach history. History is boring, so they ignore it. But that's the reality on the ground. They want to wipe Israel off the map. Fatah is no better than Hamas. Fatah is just weaker than Hamas. Meanwhile, the leaders of both organizations, the leaders of Fatah and the leaders of Hamas, are all mega millionaires, multi, multi, multi millionaires, from all the aid that has gone to the Palestinian Territory. They siphoned it off to their pocket and it didn't go to the poor people who needed it. It went to their pockets with all their banks in Switzerland and in Paris and in London and everywhere else. They are all rich so they have a vested interest in keeping the charade going. You touched on that hatred of Israel and I mean I very much see this and the media don't talk about it in the religious context, in the hatred that Islam has of the Jewish people and that eternal enmity or hatred has been there for 1,300 years plus. Of course, no one wants to talk about that because then you've got another issue that you have to deal with. If this is just land, then you can discuss that and carve a bit here, carve a bit there. But I mean, that conversation needs to be had and that's why I think actually you do have a stalemate because you've got the history of hatred and the only thing that seems to make the Islamic nations happy would be wiping Israel off the face of the earth. Exactly. Jew hatred in context of Islam. This is the subject that nobody wants to talk about because it's very uncomfortable. You know, two things people do not want to talk about, politics and religion. And when you're talking about the religion of Islam, you are talking about politics and religion mixed in one. Islam is a political movement cloaked in religion. So let's talk about Islam. You know, we all heard about the yellow star and you know, and people think that was a German invention. The yellow star was an Islamic invention in the ninth century, in Iraq by Khalifa al-Mutawakkil, the second Khalifa of Iraq who invented the yellow star to identify the Jews as they walk down the street because Jews under Islam are considered nahas. Nahas is an Arabic world that describes Filth, bodily waste, dogs, those are considered nahas. Jews are in the same category. So the Khalifa al -Mutawakkil invented the yellow star to identify the Jews when they walked down the street. So when they were walking down the street, if a Muslim man was coming, the Jew had to cross to the other side of the street as not to dirty the Muslim man who was of higher status, clean who was walking this way. That's why they invented the yellow star. Germany, Hitler copied the yellow star because Germany was working with the Mufti Hussain in Jerusalem, who flew to Germany, worked with Hitler, shared with them what the Islamists did to defeat the Jews. And that's how Germany came up with the yellow star and used it. And as a matter of fact, Hitler had a Muslim division headed by Mufti al -Husseini of Jerusalem who was advising Hitler on how to deal with the Jews. Wow, but expand because obviously Hamas, even in the name, is what Islamic resistance movement, it is purely Islam. And you can't, no matter how much the international community wants to get away from that they can't. And of course that is the fear that that religious context pulls other nations in. That is obviously the big fear. Well, look, other nations know this stuff. Don't you think Jordan knows this stuff? Don't you think Saudi Arabia knows this stuff? Why do you think in Saudi Arabia, people like you and me cannot visit Al -Harabayn, cannot visit Al -Kaaba, cannot visit the Medina? Why do you think that is? Because we are considered filth. We're not allowed because we are Christians and Jews. We are not allowed to enter those cities. Not even Donald Trump went there when he visited Saudi Arabia. Nobody can go there unless you're a Muslim. So it's not that they don't know that stuff. It's we on our side who are pretending this stuff does not exist because we are uncomfortable discussing it because it makes us uncomfortable discussing it. Nobody wants to talk about it because nobody wants to create ripples. It's time. This is why we talk about why Islam needs reforming and why these moderate leaders need to stand up and speak up. But the moderate leaders only stand up and speak up out of fear of Israel and out of respect for Israel. Sadat signed the peace treaty with Israel, not because he loved the Jews so much, but because after the 67 war and the 73 war, they realized they cannot beat the Jews. And if you cannot beat the Jews, okay, you have to live with them. We might as well live in peace. He realized, I'm not gonna spend the rest of my days fighting with Israel. And that's why Sadat said, let's sign a peace treaty. Jordan did the same thing. Jordan followed, not because they loved Israel so much, Because they realized look we have been involved with war with Israel and 57 and 67 and 73. We're not gonna be able to win against them. They are there to stay we might as well have peace. Notice today after all the problems. This is where you are seeing now more writers in the Arabic press. Writing whether in Egypt and Jordan if we would have known Israel could be defeated. Maybe we shouldn't have signed the peace treaty with Israel. People, you know, I know Israelis want to be tolerated. They talk about tolerance all the time. Oh, tolerance, tolerance is a major thing in the Jewish language. I would much rather be respected than tolerated because people tolerate you only for so long as long as they have to tolerate you. But when they respect you, tolerance becomes a side effect of respect because they're not going to want to mess with you. And so this is why, you know, this is an issue that more people need to be talking about. And this is why we need to stand with Israel. We need to support Israel. Israel is truly the front line on this war against Western civilization. Israel is the pinnacle. It's the tip of the spear. We need to realize that Iran, which calls Israel the great Satan. Remember, Israel is the little Satan. We are the big Satan. We are the end goal. Israel is just in the way in the Middle East. Iran wants to establish hegemony, and Israel is just an eyesore in its shoulder. Tell me, because those countries around, and you obviously have an understanding growing up in Lebanon, you look at Lebanon and Syria being countries in chaos, obviously Hezbollah based up there in the north in Lebanon, but then you've got also on the other side the kind of the economic side that Israel have normalized ties with countries, trade links, and the relationships with Egypt and Jordan are probably better than they have been in the past. And then of course, you've got Iran being the outlier that anything can happen there, literally. How does that kind of fit in that closeness with some countries and not wanting tension because realizing that money talks and other countries that are in a mess and therefore anything can spring up and spark things further? Well, peace leads to economic prosperity. Right now, the reason why they are making money with Israel in Jordan and in Egypt and in Qatar and in those areas that signed, like Dubai, and those areas that were involved in the Abraham Accord as well that Trump was trying to put together and bring together. Peace brings prosperity along with it. And when you don't have peace, you don't have the prosperity. And right now, even though we're talking about prosperity and economic cooperation, how many Israelis do you think right now would dare walk in Egypt wearing their yellow star? Any street in Egypt. How many Israelis do you know right now can go or will go vacation in Jordan and wear their yellow star and walk down the street? Zero. Zero. You and I know the truthful answer to that question. Zero. So, people have economic prosperity and they have peace with you when they respect you, when they perceive you as strong. Thankfully, that is holding in Jordan, that is holding in Egypt. Hopefully, it's going to hold in other countries as well. The reason in Lebanon and in Syria and those other countries, they don't have peace with Israel is because they've got Iran supporting them fight Israel. You've got Iran trying to build another counter power to America in the Middle East. So Iran is working with Russia, which is supporting Assad in Syria. Remember, Russia propped up Assad in Syria and kept him protected. He is still here. What was the last time we heard anything about Bashar Assad in Syria? Remember five years ago it was all the news. He gassed his own people. Speaking of gassing his own people, How come we were not seeing demonstrations in the streets in every major city across the globe about the six thousand Muslims in Syria who were gassed by their own leader Bashar al Assad. Well, where were those demonstrations? What those lives don't matter? Only Palestinian lives matter? You know, yeah, the double standard is mind boggling, but the reason why Hezbollah is empowered, Syria is empowered is because they are funded by Iran. And they will continue to be funded by Iran as long as America has a weak president like senile Joe Biden or Obama before him, who empowered Iran, who sent pallets of money to Iran like Obama in the middle of the night in cash on pallets landed at the airport. Biden, right before this whole brouhaha, gave $6 billion to Iran that now we're trying to pause and put a pause on so they cannot touch it. Why? That's exactly how Iran can use the money to fund terrorism. When you have a president like President Trump, who basically had Iran almost suffocating, he had tightened the rope around Iran's neck so much with the sanctions, they were on the verge of collapse. But unfortunately, you saw what happens with the election in the United States. We have now senile Joe Biden sitting at the White House. And again, Iran is back being empowered, courtesy of the Democratic Party in the United States. Well let me ask you about that international community response because it's been initially intriguing watching all the voices come out in support of Israel because you can't do anything else when you see what happened on October the 7th. We've then seen the massive demonstrations, we have them every weekend here in London, all over the world, we see it on social media. And there's that pressure on governments and it's intriguing to watch, obviously Biden initially coming on in support of Israel. That goes against the Democrat party. There'll be tensions there. How do you see kind of all that playing out? Actually, can I answer the thing about Biden, you know, going and supporting Israel, you know, which was against the Democratic Party? Okay, let's be clear. Biden was not there to support Israel. Biden was forced Israel to invite him, Blinken, showing up immediately in Israel, sitting with the War Cabinet for seven hours, trying to convince them not to go into Gaza, forced them to invite Joe Biden. Joe Biden went there because Joe Biden knew as long as he is in the Middle East, he is basically Hamas's human shield, which will stop Israel from invading Gaza. As long as Biden was in Israel, Israel was not gonna go into Gaza. And the reason why Biden was there is to tell Israel, look, we're not going to give you or stand with you or give you the bunker buster bombs unless you agree on humanitarian aid to Gaza and to allow the humanitarian aid to enter. Biden was not there to support Israel. Biden was there to twist Israel's arm to agree to the Biden handlers, because Biden doesn't have a brain, it's whoever handling Biden, telling Biden that, you know, we need to send support for Hamas. We need to allow these trucks to enter and give gate to Israel. And they told Israel, we are not going to give you bunker busters unless you agree to that. Knowing that they had Israel by the you know what. Israel needed the bunker busters because that's the only way they can bomb the tunnels before they go into Gaza. They needed to be able to block and destroy those tunnels before they enter Gaza on the ground. And that's why Biden was there. Biden was not there because he loves Israel. He wants Israel to be strong. Biden was there for a reason, and the reason was more to benefit Hamas than to actually benefit Israel. We've seen the same from the media initially, as what else could you do, in these pictures from the seventh but then I've certainly witnessed a slow change certainly in the UK looking at the European media all focusing on, well these poor people they're simply living their lives, they're in a hospital that gets attacked by the Israelis and the suffering in the pictures and that's coming out and Israel have always had a PR problem in the media always and you see this beginning to come out again. Yes they still and they still don't know how to defend themselves even though they've got a Hasbara department you know we're willing to get together and give some tips to the Israeli government on how to defend themselves, on how to do PR but they don't and look I have sent emails to Israel I have personally I have appealed to the Israeli government to release the footage, the Hamas footage of the massacres that they have done. Israel has not released it yet. The world needs to see the images just like ISIS. You know, Hamas recorded their atrocities just like ISIS used to record theirs. ISIS used to send theirs to Al Jazeera and Al Jazeera gladly aired it of the beheading of the 20 Christian cops on the shores of whatever they beheaded them, or whatever, massacres, burning a guy in a tank, a pilot. I mean, remember, ISIS used to brag about these things, and Al Jazeera was glad to show all these images. On the other hand, Israel is reluctant to release the Hamas footage. Shooting the rape, shooting the cutting of a mother's stomach and getting the baby out. I mean, it is horrific images that the world has not seen yet. So this is exactly what gives the Palestinian a way out to saying, oh, it's ill horror. It's all hearsay None of this happened. This is all Israeli lies. Meanwhile Israel's killing all these Palestinians, which is absolutely not true. I mean the Palestinians who are the Ministry of Health are broadcasting information out the, exaggerated beyond exaggeration. I mean they're talking about that 30,000 people dead in Gaza so far and all the wounded and injured. Really? There are 3,000 hospital beds in Gaza. So where are the rest? Where are they? Show us images. Okay, so 30,000 people died. Where did you bury them? Where are they? Where did you bury them? I mean, you know, the numbers don't add up. The Gazans are not talking about how many Hamas soldiers have died. So far from the beginning of this war, we have not heard about one Hamas soldier dead. Really? With all the bombing, not one soldier dead? What about the heads of Hamas that died? Not one? We hear it from Israel when they kill somebody, but we don't hear it from Hamas. So we know the numbers are lying. Israel needs to come out and show the world the footage that they have, the monstrosities that Hamas committed against Israel, perpetrated against Israel. And I think if Israel does that, we will see a little bit of a change on the world stage with the sympathy. But Israel is not releasing those messages and all they're hearing is from the Palestinians saying this is all lies, nothing really happened. Otherwise Israel would have showed it. You know, Israel talks about beheaded children. We haven't seen anything yet. They've got to show it. And so that's the problem. And again, the media is always on the side of the Palestinians because the Palestinians scream and yell and talk about feelings while the Israelis are about logic. Israelis talk about legal stuff. You know, resolution, you know, UN article resolution 242, article one and two, they send you these big generals who speak with heavy accents, while the Palestinians, on the other hand, talk about. Oh, the poor old woman sitting in the hot sun in Gaza at a cross point for eight hours. She was about to faint and pass out because the bloody Israelis wouldn't let her pass. So the Palestinians talk about human suffering. They paint images with their words, while the Israelis talk about resolution 242, article one and two. That's how Israel loses the PR relationship, the PR relation. Let me finish off on kind of how this plays out. I mean, can you defeat Hamas? Obviously Netanyahu, this is his third time as PM. He has been a fixture on the Israeli political scene since what, the mid 90s? Probably before then, but Prime Minister since 96 in three spells. I mean, he's fighting for his legacy as well. And I'm wondering, it actually is, is it achievable to destroy an enemy that not only has absolute hatred for you, but also has spent so long preparing for this. And Israel thought when they pulled out of Gaza in 2005, they thought that's it. We're now out of this, but now they've been sucked back in. So, kind of as you look ahead, BB's legacy, but also is it possible to actually get rid of this neighbour that is always on the edge of attacking? You cannot get rid of an enemy that doesn't fear you. Back when Israel actually fought wars to win wars, not caring what the UN thought, not caring about the world media, back when Israel won 67, back when Israel won 73, the whole world was on the side of Israel. Israel fought a bloody war without caring what the UN thinks of Israel. So when Israel fought wars to win wars the people respected Israel when the new Israeli population started fighting wars thinking. Oh is the UN gonna like us? Oh my gosh. We know that you're gonna say bad things about us. Oh my goodness. What is America gonna think about us and the new generation wanted to live in a place? Oh, we don't want to fight wars anymore. We want to leave, you know. We want to have peace with them, this whole new weak generation who thought we can have peace with our enemies because, after all, we're all wonderful, and we all want to have a party, and we all want to go to concerts. And of course, Palestinian children would love to attend concerts as well. And of course, Palestinians want to live in peace as well. The Israeli side forgot what it's like. Because they had moved so far away from the Holocaust, they forgot how much people hated them. And when people hate you so much, I think this was a wake -up call to Israel to realize people really want to kill you, and not only kill you in Israel. They want to kill the Jews anywhere else in the world. They hate the Jewish people. When you see people in America screaming death to the Jews, when you see people in Australia screaming, annihilate the Jews, when you hear people from Europe on the streets, you know, less than 100 years since the Holocaust, screaming, kill the Jews. The Jewish people worldwide need to realize we have to create a country where we have to fight to survive, period. It's about us. It's not about anybody else. People in Australia do not want to kill the Americans. They're not saying kill all the Christians. They're not saying wipe the Buddhists off the map. They want to wipe the Jews off the map. So we need to defend ourselves. And so, for Netanyahu. Netanyahu's legacy is going to be, he fought as hard as he can for Israel. It's the weaklings in Israel who got so distracted and the little minutiae about whatever. And I'm not familiar with the politics inside Israel. You know, obviously I'm an outsider. I have no idea what they were fighting about. You know, we hear on the outside they were fighting over the judges and the judicial system, but obviously we're not members of the country. We do not know the intricacies of the inner fighting or the disagreements within whatever country. But when you look at the big scope, when you look at the world picture, at policies, like I mentioned to you at the beginning of this interview, I don't vote for a man, I vote for policies. Because like I said in the beginning of this interview, when I started my organization, George Bush was in power, Obama came to power, Trump came to power, Biden is in power, Biden's going to go, whoever else is going to come to power. I look at policies, not the man. The man going to come and go. And what Israel needs is a man who is willing to fight for the security and safety for Israel. Forget the name. Look at the policies. Are the policies good for Israel's survival? Is Iran going to fear an Ahud Barak or are they going to fear Netanyahu? Is Iran going to fear a lefty controller of Israel or as a right wing war hawk controller of Israel. You have to think through your enemy's eyes in order to secure your own safety. And so the only way Israel, Israel is going to be judged, not Netanyahu as a leader, but Israel, Israel's leadership in general, because Israel is a democratic nation and it's more than one man. It's a leadership. They elect their representative. And so Israel is going be judged whether the Jews took their eye off the ball and became too weak and too gullible to think they can have peace with people who repeatedly say, we hate you, we want to kill you and the Jews are not listening to those and they are not hearing the lessons of history, believe those who say they want to kill you because they usually follow through that's how history is going to judge Israel, not Netanyahu as a person, but Israeli leadership in general. Brigitte Gabriel, I love having you on. Your insights on not only Islam, but the region in the Middle East is phenomenal. I love the work that ACT for America do, actforamerica.org, one of the premier grassroots organizations in America that will show the viewers and listeners how to get involved and how to really make a difference. So thank you so much for joining us today. Thank you. Absolutely. Thank you for having me with you. And I encourage everybody, If you love Israel, if you agree with my point of view and the way I was discussing, please go to actforamerica.org and join us. We work on national security policy, and we believe Israel is a part of America's national security. That's how we were able to censure Rashida Tlaib. We led the charge in censuring Rashida Tlaib in Congress. We led the charge in isolating the support for Israel from the big bill in finance to make sure Israel gets the support. If you are a lover for Israel, please go to our website, actforamerica.org. Take action on our Act Now National. We have many bills right now to support Israel and the Jewish people and Israeli policies. Please take action. If you are an American watching us right now, anywhere in the world, please take action on our Act Now campaign and go to actforamerica.org. Thank you so much, Peter, for having me with you. It's always such a pleasure to be with you. I love having you on and it's perfect that you've left the viewers with something they can actually do because I think often people feel maybe powerless in situations and it's great that this, at the finishing this interview, they can go and they can go to the website and they can actually sign up and make a difference. So thank you for what you do and Brigitte, thank you for your time today. Thank you, my friend. Have a great day.

Club FM Kerala
Club FM Star Jam with Nahas Hidayath || RJ Rafi

Club FM Kerala

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 43:59


Club FM Star Jam with Nahas Hidayath || RJ Rafi . Director of the superhit movie RDX , Nahas Hidayath on Club FM Star Jam With RJ Rafi Produced By : RJ Rafi Guest Curation : RJ Rahul Sound : Vineeth TN Camera : Jenson J , Amal dev PD Edit : Amal Dev PD Sound : Vineeth Kumar TN

Leaders in Sport
Roger Nahas on Escaping the Rat Race & How to Invest in Your Future as a Coach

Leaders in Sport

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2023 43:52


Roger Nahas is a lifelong entrepreneur, a 23-year fitness industry veteran, a real estate investor, and a real estate agent. He escaped the rat race of the fitness industry, and today, he's sharing how you can too! Tune into today's episode to dive into all things finance. He talks about investing in your future, how to enter the real estate market if you feel like it's impossible and how to craft your exit plan as a coach. More about Roger: Roger's fitness journey started in 1999 when he entered and won the Body For Life Transformation Challenge. After completely transforming his own body with exercise and nutrition, and seeing how it impacted all other aspects of his life, he committed to helping others achieve the same kind of transformations. First as a Personal Trainer and Holistic Lifestyle Coach and then as the co-creator and co-founder of Best Body Bootcamp, which was named Canada's 15th fastest-growing company in 2010. Most recently, Roger has become an investor focused Real Estate Agent and the founder and creator of the Modern Day Gladiator Blueprint, a coaching program empowering driven men to build strong, athletic, functional bodies, become better husbands, fathers and leaders, create financial freedom, and live a life of connection and purpose. Connect with RogerInstagram: @rogernahasFollow Designs for Sport Instagram: @designsforsportWebsite: www.designsforsport.comFollow Jordan BokserInstagram: @jordan.bokser

Attacking Third: A CBS Sports Soccer Podcast
Challenge Cup Final Preview: North Carolina vs Racing Louisville | NC coach Sean Nahas & Racing's Thembi Kgatlana Interviews (Soccer 9/8)

Attacking Third: A CBS Sports Soccer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2023 51:15


Lisa Carlin, Aaron West, Jordan Angeli and Darian Jenkins discuss USWNT legend Julie Ertz's farewell game as well as the complaint filed against disgraced Spanish soccer federation president Luis Rubiales. Then, it's all about Saturday's NWSL Challenge Cup final as North Carolina Courage head coach Sean Nahas joins to talk about getting past Kansas City and how international players have impacted his roster. Next, the crew analyzes Wednesday's semifinals before welcoming in Racing Louisville's Thembi Kgatlana to talk about her recovery from an achilles tear, representing South Africa at the World Cup and more. And Sandra Herrera swings by at the end to preview the title-deciding game!   Watch USWNT, NWSL and WSL games on P+" with a link to https://www.paramountplus.com/home/ Attacking Third is available for free on the Audacy app as well as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher and wherever else you listen to podcasts.  Follow the Attacking Third team on Twitter: @AttackingThird, @SandHerrera_, @LisaCarlin32, @Jordangeli , @JennyaChiu and @Darian_Jenks. Visit the Attacking Third YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/attackingthird You can listen to Attacking Third on your smart speakers! Simply say "Alexa, play the latest episode of the Attacking Third podcast" or "Hey Google, play the latest episode of the Attacking Third podcast." For more soccer coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Nuus
Nahas: Protokol is in plek vir leierskap met Hage in hospitaal

Nuus

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2023 0:35


Die voormalige eerste minister Nahas Angula sê daar is protokol in plek met President Hage Geingob wat tans in ‘n Windhoekse hospitaal is. Die adjunk-president Nangolo Mbumba woon ook die tweede Rusland-Afrika Ekonomiese en Militêre Beraad in die Russiese hoofstad St. Petersburg by. Geingob word môre ontslaan en hervat eers sy amptelike pligte volgende Woensdag. Angula het die protokol aan Kosmos 94.1 Nuus verduidelik en sê daar is geen rede tot kommer niemand in beheer is van die land nie...

Front Row
Mel C on dancing with Jules Cunningham, film-maker Laura Poitras, musician Rasha Nahas

Front Row

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2023 42:12


Melanie C, aka Sporty Spice, is best known for being in one of the most successful girl groups of all time. But this week she's swapping the pop world for the dance world and performing a new contemporary piece by the choreographer Jules Cunningham at Sadler's Wells. Melanie C and Jules Cunningham discuss their collaboration, How Did We Get Here? Rasha Nahas is a Palestinian singer-songwriter who was born in Haifa and now lives in Berlin. She tells Samira about her new album, Amrat, which is her first album in Arabic, and which explores nostalgia, sense of place, and the importance of authentic instrumental music. Film-maker Laura Poitras talks about her new documentary, All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, which has been nominated for this year's Academy Awards. Following the photographer Nan Goldin's campaign against Purdue Pharma, owned by the Sackler family, for their part in the opioid crisis, the film paints an intimate portrait of Goldin's life, work and activism. Presenter: Samira Ahmed Producer: Eliane Glaser Photo of Mel C, Harry Alexander and Jules Cunningham credit: Camilla Greenwell

The Blockchain.com Podcast
Exploring: Avalanche with John Nahas, Vice President Of Business Development at Ava Labs

The Blockchain.com Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2022 29:17


In this episode, we spoke with John Nahas, Vice President Of Business Development of Ava Lab. Founded in 2019 by Dr. Emin Gun Sirer, Avalanche is a programmable smart contracts platform for decentralized applications. John explains what makes Avalanche different from other blockchains and how new innovators and entrepreneurs can get involved in the space. You can buy, sell, swap, trade and store AVAX on Blockchain.com sign up below to get started today. Sign up for a Wallet https://bit.ly/3dpcCQw Sign up to the Exchange https://bit.ly/3QzCKGP

The Art of Slowing Down to Quantum Leap
Ep 46: Self-Worth and Preventing Burnout for Projectors with Daniela Nahas - 2/4 Splenic Projector

The Art of Slowing Down to Quantum Leap

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2022 59:21


In this episode Analena has an insightful conversation with Daniela Nahas about the importance of self-worth when it comes to preventing burnout. As a 2/4 Splenic Projector Human Design has helped her tremendously to find a way that is more aligned for her unique energy blueprint. So she has shifted from hustle and the "just do it" mentality in the fitness industry to a more laid back and slow down approach for herself and her clients. Today she integrates more holistic practices, meditation and exercise in a way that is not adding stress to the body. More about Daniela: Daniela is a Transformational Self Care Coach for Female Entrepreneurs. She helps entrepreneurs own their worth, so they can prioritize themselves and step away from the constant need to hustle and self sacrifice, and live a life that feels aligned with their vision of success. As previously burnt out entrepreneur she knows first hand what it's like to struggle to hold all the pieces together and also show up powerfully for your business when you feel exhausted and depleted, so she's made it her mission to help women approach their lives in a way that honors their needs first. How to get in touch with Daniela: Daniela's Podcast: https://anchor.fm/daniela-nahas Daniela's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/revivewithdaniela/ Daniela's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/daniela-nahas-90a05819/ More Links: https://linktr.ee/danielanahas -> Ignite: A 1:1 program for entrepreneurs who want their time, energy and creativity back so they can achieve their ambitious goals while igniting their life with pleasure, joy and fulfillment How to get in touch with Analena: E-mail: bloom@analenafuchs.com Analena's Website: https://www.analenafuchs.com - Analena's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/analena.fuchs/ Aligned Living Academy: https://www.alignedlivingacademy.com - Human Design Certification for Conscious Business Leader --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-art-of-slowing-down/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-art-of-slowing-down/support

Courage on the Pitch
Sean Nahas - Interim Head Coach

Courage on the Pitch

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2022 36:19


Courage on the Pitch with Megan O'Keefe, presented by Wake Orthopedics Urgent Care, celebrates the local professional women's soccer team in Raleigh-area, the North Carolina Courage! The Courage have some of THE best soccer players in the world, playing right here in North Carolina. From World Cup champs, to Olympians, to ACC stars gone pro, the state is full of world class talent … and boy do they have some amazing stories to tell! On this episode, interim head coach Sean Nahas joins the show. Nahas discusses his background in soccer, his role as the interim head coach for the NC Courage, and the current state of the team. #NCCourage #NWSL Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

SOUNDFOOD
EVERYTHING IN JOY | Creating Conscious Community with Mel Nahas

SOUNDFOOD

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2022 84:34


Join us for a joyful and delicious stream of conversation with a true leader in the conscious community, Mel Nahas.    Drawing from a reputable career in music and television and working with some of the industry's most well-known networks, brands, and talents, Mel embraces her reflector Human Design as the co-founder and curator of the Conscious City Guide ~ an ever-evolving platform and resource for those wanting to embrace an awakened lifestyle.    Mel's passion for connecting people back to themselves, their communities and the planet is powerful; she has been sought out by some of the most highly accoladed and influential brands and talent in the world and we are honored to have her share a moment of presence with us as she embarks on some exciting new ventures.    This conversation is steeped in grounded wisdom, simple pleasures and delight.  Thank you Mel for reflecting your light into the world!    NOURISH This podcast is nourished by your donations and the symbiotic support of our partners:   Make a donation to the podcast    Living Libations: SOUNDFOOD15  for 15% off livinglibations.com   Material Kitchen: use CITRINE for 20% off everything materialkitchen.com   Rainbo: SOUNDFOOD15 for 15% off all medicinal mushrooms rainbo.com   OSEA: use CITRINE for 10% off oseamalibu.com sea to skin magic   Christy Dawn: 15NITSAC for 15% off farm-to-closet christydawn.com    Living Tea: use SOUNDFOOD for 10% off all tea nourishment livingtea.net   LEARN  about our guest Mel Nahas @nahaste |Conscious City Guide | @ConsciousCityGuide |    MENTIONED EMF-PROTECTING  INFINITY SCARF - use the code CONSCIOUS for 10% off  Conscious City Guide  Spirit Weavers  Pod with Mea  Pod with Sima Morrison  Lacy Phillips  My Human Design  Water Tiger  Pod with SriMati  Peaky Blinders Conscious x Lambs Scarf  Adeline Kane CONNECT @soundfoodspace @nitsacitrine TELEPORTAL tune in via text for high vibrational updates @ 1-805-398-6661  MERCURIAL MAIL (our monthly newsletter) WEB P.S. If you feel inspired to leave us a review on APPLE PODCAST we would be eternally grateful!

Culture State
Sean Nahas, NC Courage Soccer Head Coach

Culture State

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 32:15


This week's guest is Sean Nahas, head coach of the North Carolina Courage of the NWSL. Nahas took over as head coach of the NC Courage on an interim basis in October 2021, and became the permanent head coach in December of 2021. Nahas talks about building up the youth programs with NCFC, the changes in youth soccer, his journey to becoming the head coach, and how women's soccer and the NWSL can continue to grow. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Culture State
Sean Nahas, NC Courage Soccer Head Coach

Culture State

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 31:00


This week's guest is Sean Nahas, head coach of the North Carolina Courage of the NWSL. Nahas took over as head coach of the NC Courage on an interim basis in October 2021, and became the permanent head coach in December of 2021. Nahas talks about building up the youth programs with NCFC, the changes in youth soccer, his journey to becoming the head coach, and how women's soccer and the NWSL can continue to grow. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Best of The OG with Ovies & Giglio
What's Trending, F1 takes over Miami and the Carolina Hurricanes run into trouble in Boston. And NC Courage Head Coach, Sean Nahas on winning the Challenge Cup over the weekend.

The Best of The OG with Ovies & Giglio

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 37:21


What's Trending, F1 takes over Miami and the Carolina Hurricanes run into trouble in Boston. And NC Courage Head Coach, Sean Nahas on winning the Challenge Cup over the weekend.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Subnet Show
Business Development on Avalanche w/ Ava Labs VP of BD John Nahas

Subnet Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 55:09


This week the team chats with VP of Business Development at Ava Labs John Nahas. They discuss the importance of business development in an open financial system and all of the exciting and successful initiatives which John has helped to push forward since joining Ava Labs. Support Subnet: X-avax1r4zp7pxa8hjjkkc5rutwqw6peqvx68m7zzllu9 C-Chain: 0xa155c6ec8c7d974453f3453f04216bf60a35220d Follow Gabriel on twitter: https://twitter.com/cgcardona Follow Connor on twitter: https://twitter.com/das_connor Follow John on twitter: https://twitter.com/SJohn_Nahas

What the Health?! with Dr. Greg Eckel
EP 112: WTH ?!? W/Dr. Juliana Nahas

What the Health?! with Dr. Greg Eckel

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2022 51:21


An Integrative approach to ADHD and Autism- ( Brain Health in children with chronic conditions)

The Beirut Banyan
Ep.307 (Video): Citizens in a State with Charbel Nahas

The Beirut Banyan

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 111:55


0:00 Intro 3:25 List formation 14:55 Political failures 27:33 Building blocks 42:25 The problem persists 49:20 Hezbollah is preserved 1:15:25 Taef 1:32:23 Citizens in a State We're with Charbel Nahas for Episode 307 of The Beirut Banyan. Click to watch: https://youtu.be/qN_7g5A7tFw We discuss difficulties surrounding the list formation process, structural failures that have kept Lebanon's politics paralyzed and the building blocks necessary to reform and rebuild the state. Our conversation includes addressing the issue of Hezbollah's sub-state security and weaponry, the limitations of the Taef Agreement and Citizen in a State's political journey. Charbel Nahas is MP Candidate for Beirut 1 District and the General Secretary of Citizens in a State. Help support The Beirut Banyan by contributing via PayPal: https://www.paypal.me/walkbeirut Or donating through our Patreon page: https://www.patreon.com/thebeirutbanyan Subscribe to our podcast from your preferred platform. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram & Twitter: @thebeirutbanyan And check out our website: www.ronniechatah.com Music by Marc Codsi. Animation & illustration by Sana Chaaban.

Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 24 – An Unexpected Unstoppable Interview Opportunity

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 44:12


In some past episodes, I mentioned participating in a podcast interview program entitled Podapalooza. During my last interview of the day, instead of having a scheduled person to interview I suddenly found myself interviewing three people at once, none of whom was my scheduled interviewee. Talk about live radio in action!   The three people, as I discovered, all had experiences and careers in common. They all work in mental healing and Neuro-Linguistic Programming in one way or another. I hope you find this episode and my interview as intriguing as did I. These three individuals all offer good lessons to help us live, move forward, and discover how to be unstoppable in our ever-changing and challenging world.   Some directories do not show full show notes. For the complete transcription please visit https://michaelhingson.com/podcast   About the Guests: Art Giser Art Giser is the creator of Energetic NLP, a special blend of NLP (Neuro-Linguistic Programming), spiritual principles, and transformative energy work. He is an internationally renowned NLP trainer, life coach, executive coach, intuitive, master healer, and medical researcher. Art is known for his humor, caring, miraculous remote energy work, and his ability to help people release energetic and unconscious blocks and limitations and open up their miraculous abilities. https://blockbuster7.com   Denise Belisle Denise Belisle is the founder of Denise Belisle in Motion Coaching. She is a serenity expert and positive intelligence specialist. Her 40 years of meditation practice and her innate nature to look for the gift in everything around her, allows her to guide her clients to new levels that were inaccessible for them before. https://denisebelisle.com/   Dr. Juliana Nahas Dr Juliana Nahas, is a board certified pediatrician and a Functional Medicine Certified Practitioner, who specializes in treating complex pediatric health conditions like Autism, ADHD, Autoimmune Disorders, Abdominal Pain Disorders, Obesity, Asthma, Allergies, Eczema and more…. For over 25 years, Dr Nahas has served her community in the tri- counties of Newton, Rockdale and Walton, GA, and is now offering virtual visits for clients who live at a distance. Dr Nahas is an integrative physician, experienced in both conventional, and holistic/functional approaches,as well as in Mind-Body-Soul medicine, to help your children have the best overall health possible. After experiencing her own troubles with an autoimmune condition that almost rendered her cripple, Dr Nahas searched all types of conventional and alternative modalities to get well again. She knew that taking Advil everyday wasn't the answer, and she found that energy healing, yoga and mindset meditations as well as a functional medicine approach led her to resume her vibrant energy and vitality, in a few short months. https://covingtonpediatrics.com/      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 also subscribe in your favorite podcast app.   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 UM Intro/Outro  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  01:19 Hi, thanks for coming by and joining us on unstoppable mindset. I mentioned some time ago about an event with which we became involved called Podapalooza. It was an event that took place on a Saturday in December, where podcast interviewers were matched with people who wanted to be interviewed, I had the opportunity to do five different shows that day. The last one was supposed to be with one person who was unable to attend. And as a result, we got matched with someone else but not just one person, we got matched with three different people. That was an unexpected thing, talking about the unexpected meet. What I decided to do was to literally hold a round table with all three of them at the same time. All of them were involved with healing from a mental standpoint, neuro linguistic programming and other kinds of self improvement things. So were these people unstoppable? And do they fit into our mode and our theme? Well, I think they were but more important than that. These people are all involved in teaching others how to be unstoppable how to deal with challenges that they face, and move forward from them. I'd like you to meet them all. Now, Art. Let's start with you.   Art Giser  02:37 Okay, thank you. I'm Art Giser. I'm the creator of energetic NLP, which brings together neuro linguistic programming and people haven't heard of that they've heard of the most famous person in our field is Tony Robbins. He has his own way of doing things. The core of his ability to change people's lives is NLP. And I've been a trainer in NLP since 85. But I combine that with spiritual principles, healing and transformative energy work, and including remote energy work and intuition, to our development and everything else I've learned over the last 40 years. And I have a background also in medical research, working with Fortune 100 companies on developing extraordinary leaders and teams. I try to bring everything together into my work.   Michael Hingson  03:22 Great. Denise.   Denise Belisle  03:24 Hi. Yes, thank you so much. I'm Denise Belisle, I'm a serenity expert and positive intelligence specialist. And what I do is I work with business woman to empower them to become more serene and peaceful in their life. So that they can remove the stress, they can remove the overwhelm, and they can still be efficient, but without the stress. I have been combining years of experience and learning into one way of coaching my clients. And actually I said one way, but there's no one way. That's the beauty of what i do is i i use wherever necessary with my clients, they align them into where they want to go. So I've learned different platform over the years and then I can caters to my busy business woman to help them move forward in a direction they want to go to either having better relationship with their spouse or whether they want to be more efficient at work, they want to reach the next level. So I work with them in that direction that they need in order for them to be more successful and staying serene.   Michael Hingson  04:33 Super sounds like there's a lot to talk about there. Juliana.   Juliana Nahas  04:38 Hi everyone. I'm Dr. Juliana Nahas I am a medical doctor as a matter of fact a pediatrician with also a background certification in functional medicine which brings in more natural and holistic solutions. I've also trained and certified to become an energy healer and work a lot with mindset meditation and I guess energetic psychology like EFT tapping to help my patients who have ADHD and autism, move through their disorder and get on the other side.   Michael Hingson  05:11 So, as all of you know, this podcast is called unstoppable mindset. And it seems to me that in one way or another, all of you are working to help people grow and enhance and become if you will more unstoppable and be able to deal with themselves. Do you want to talk about anybody want to start and talk about that a little bit and tell us some stories about what you do and how you're helping people become unstoppable.   Denise Belisle  05:39 I can start great. This is the nice so so what I do is, I work with the voices people have in their mind, that's the main the basis of what I do. And those voices we call them with positive intelligence, we call them saboteurs. And the submitters are controlling people's reaction action, everything that's going on, we all have those voices, we can't deny it, when we're quiet. Well, there's always something going on in there between our ears. So what I do is I help them first of all, identify their saboteurs. Then afterwards, we work into finding ways to recognize when and how they are interacting in our lives, these Saboteurs usually telling us lies, and guiding you in a direction that is not for the best of our interests. And if it feels like it is, but in the end, it won't be the most positive way to doing it. And then we bring in the sage, which is the more positive side of the brain that allow people to become more peaceful in their life, having more tools in their tool belt to go and become more curious about what's going on, instead of looking into the negative side, we look more into the positive side, and we increase the happiness by having even better results that you will have had with your Saboteurs and being more happy in the long term. So in a nutshell, that's how we become very good at helping people changing their life and becoming more successful and more happy.   Michael Hingson  07:16 Art, how about you?   Art Giser  07:18 One of the things that I work a great deal with the unconscious mind in all programming, it's something that most people aren't even aware of. I mean, everybody knows their unconscious mind is huge effect on their life, they don't realize how their energy field affects them. And ever since person was in their mother's womb, they've been absorbing energies from other people. And I think most people would be appalled if they realized how much of the energy in their energy field isn't theirs. So when you have an intense emotion that's difficult to deal with, whether it's anxiety, or fear, or grief, or hopelessness, or any of the many things that get in the way of being unstoppable. Most of the energy of that emotional state won't even be your own energy, its energy that you've absorbed from other people. So one of the things that I do is I teach people how to clear out the energy that isn't there. Because my experience over the last 36 years is people can deal with their authentic emotions, even the really intense, difficult ones where they're getting fear, grief, anxiety, but they can't deal with is when they're running other people's emotional energies is you can go to therapy forever, you can learn techniques, you can change your breathing, all those things help, but all you're doing is handling it, you can't heal it, when you clear other people's energy up, then you can work with what's authentically yours. So that's a huge part of what I do that helps people be unstoppable.   Juliana Nahas  08:46 I love what you just said art and actually what you said, Denise as well. I take elements of what you've said, and I incorporate it with my work, of course, my predominant approach to healing is medical. But sometimes we know it's not a biological issue that's plaguing the child, it may be more psychological, whether they have anxiety, or OCD, other quirks, and so on. So I do bring in mindset, and in the form of meditation, in the form of relaxation and visualization. And those are particularly easy to work with children on as well as tapping because again, when you're talking, I don't know, everybody in the audience will know what EFT is, but it's where you take known energy points in the body there along the meridians, or the acupuncture lines, if you will, but instead of using needles, we're using our fingers to tap energy points, also vocalize What is the trouble with the picture at the moment. So whatever the pain would be, or the fear would be we would tap along these meridian points and talk them out so that we can release them Just like art said, it's about releasing energy.   Art Giser  10:06 And I just piggyback on that and say, I'm thrilled it, I worked. I worked in medical school as a researcher for 11 years. And it's always so wonderful. And a lot of nurses are open to energy work and your doctors and more and more, I guess, all the time. But so many people will like, you know, in the energy healing field, get anti drugs and anti doctors and everything. And one of my teachers years ago would go your doctors, God's lightworkers, too. And that, to me, it's all about complementary approaches. And this, you know, so it's wonderful to hear that you're bringing both together, not only   Juliana Nahas  10:45 yeah, there's more need for that I think a lot of doctors are burning out. And I know, that's not the topic of today. But it's all about mindset, if the doctors mindset   Denise Belisle  10:54 is close to   Juliana Nahas  10:57 being an old way of doing things, where are they gonna go, they're gonna quit, right. But if we all could embrace these alternative modalities, and bring them into our own lives, and then share it with our patients, whether it's prayer, whether it's energy healing, whether it's it really opens a whole new avenue for our own healing, and then to take it to our patients and our clients.   Denise Belisle  11:19 Beautiful. And then Michael, go ahead. I was gonna say, I just love the idea that you using, you're working with children also. Because there's so much trauma that we see people going back to their young age and carrying on to the adult age. And by healing the trauma, right from when it appears, then you can move forward in life and not having those crutches that you carry with you along the way. So that's amazing.   Juliana Nahas  11:50 Thank you.   Michael Hingson  11:52 How do we get people to do more of exactly what you're talking about? How do we get more people to be introspective look at themselves and really try to grow? When it seems to me we live in a world today where so many people just move forward? They think they have all the answers. And we we especially bringing up their children, we bring them up in a very rigid mindset way, and that we don't really teach them to think about exploring or looking at alternatives, how do we change that pattern?   Juliana Nahas  12:28 What I've what I've seen with COVID than the last two years is there's a rewiring of a lot of the old ways, parents are at a loss as to how to navigate this difficult time. And so they're asking questions, and they're not just asking doctors, they're really going online, they're spending a lot of time on YouTube and searching, you know, all the Google and different search media of ways to help their children. So I see this as an opportunity for like, like are and Denise to step in and really share their message. And more and more doctors are coming to the fore, that they have a little side that they never talked about, I think it's becoming more mainstream now. So it's gonna happen, it's just might take a decade or two, but the more workers come forward about it, I think the more mainstream, it's gonna go faster.   Art Giser  13:23 Well, and there's a number of programs and stuff, a lot of these things, you can take out the, the kind of woowoo language, you can take out the religious language. And so often, like in my corporate work, I'd be working with really high level, like, executives and pharmaceutical companies in high tech, and some of them were open to the energy work, but a lot of it, I could just describe, but Well, this is working with your unconscious mind, this is a visualization. It's a metaphor, which is also true. And they, you know, I could have the metaphorically removing energy and they don't actually have to believe it. The other things are programs now teaching mindfulness to little kids, and a friend of mine was doing it and, and again, they they did it in such a way to not offend religious parents who might think, you know, imagine not sound Buddhist or anything. And he had a wonderful scrapbook of these little kids in made and it was all like, I used to be really nervous in class, but Mr. Wolfe taught us how to stop and breathe. I mean, it was so beautiful. So me there are programs out there and they're doing a great job of, of making it acceptable in a public school that you're not pushing other people's buttons. So it's starting to happen not enough. That is happening.   Denise Belisle  14:43 Yeah, I think we need to work more and more into that into opening, not be afraid to, to show people that it's something that is accessible to them and, and remove as we were We've been saying like the root part of it, you know, that is more streamline now they're more and more people are getting into opening their mind. Dr. Joe Dispenza has been an incredible job with the print on physics and helping people visualizing their life, the placebo effect and all that slowly bringing different, different ways for people to open their mind. And there's more documentary now being out there showing people how to that you're able to take charge of your life. So I think we're getting there, hopefully sooner than later. I hope so.   Michael Hingson  15:36 Well, you bring up an interesting point, art, I think you said it, where you talked about what teachers are doing and so on. But I know my wife was a teacher for years. And one of the constant comments that she still makes about teaching is, no matter what you do with the schools, the kids go home, and they spend more time at home. And there's this great disconnect between what the the teacher wants to teach or can teach, and what the parents teach or don't teach, how do we get the parents to be more involved and to be open and and again, teach children to be more explorative. And I asked that, I'll tell you even why I do that, and what perspective I come from, I have grown up as a as a blind child and grew up and became an a blind adult, although I still consider myself a kid at 72, almost, but hey, whatever. But I know so many blind children whose parents wouldn't let them explore wouldn't let them take risks, and they grow up, not really knowing how to deal with the world. And fearing being blind. My parents were significantly different, in that they even said, right from the outset, when it was discovered, I was blind. And the doctor said, well send him to a home because he'll never amount anything, he can't grow up and accomplish anything. They said, he can do whatever he wants, and he'll be fine. So the the issue is, how do we get parents to let children explore, and I realize we live in a really tough world today, it's got to be really hard to be a kid. But how do we help parents learn to explore and let your kids learn to explore,   Juliana Nahas  17:25 I can go first. It come from the parents modeling the thought pattern and behaviors of the parents themselves don't believe that they can do anything they wish or they can set their mind on their goals. They're not going to model that for their children, right? The teachers well, and the kids will learn from that. And eventually, the kids will decide on their own who they want to model and follow. But at home, it has to start with the parents desiring to be a role model for their child and not just telling them what to do. So I think that's where we have to start. And in shaping the minds, teaching them that whatever they set their mind on creating, they can do so   Denise Belisle  18:05 what I would add to that is to have what I see nowadays, when you go out and you see parents with their kids, whether it's in the restaurant, or wherever they are, I found that electronic device has replaced the parents quite a bit. So what I would recommend is to go back into parenting, and forget about electronic device, if your child is is screaming, that's because he wants your attention. He doesn't want to be distracted by a little computer screen, and to be involved into parenting your children in that leave it to a character on the screen to entertain your child. So I think just go back to to being a parents and parenting and showing by example. So if parents spend their time on their phone and all that, well, that's what the kids going to go and that would that does is that create this distancing between emotion and the way people are interacting with one another's from now into the future. And even more in the last two years because of COVID because we've been distancing ourselves. Kids don't go to school. They haven't been in school for a year and a half, or whatever that is, and all of that together. I think parents have to go back into parenting and no, it's not easy. Yes, it does take a lot of time, and if it's too difficult to make children, so. So that's my point of view.   Art Giser  19:35 Thank you. I had one thing and I think, Niels Bohr that quantum physicist said, you know something's a deep truth because the opposite is also likely to be true. And well, obviously, hugely important for parents to be role models, but I'd like to give parents some hope to that. I know some parents who can't model things out but they still inspire their children. So A former student of mine who, when she started working with me, it was a emotional mess. She had had her young boys pick out clothes that represented different emotional states. And she would teach them like, they change clothes. And she was teaching them that they go, they could change their emotional state, they didn't have to stay stuck in it. She was going, I couldn't do it. And I wanted to teach my boys to do it. So Well, absolutely, you want to be a role model. I'd like to give parents a little grace, even if you can't be predict when the kids are older, you can talk about it and you can give them experiences. So like maybe you weren't independent, you can give your kids experiences to be independent.   Denise Belisle  20:39 So I love that, of course,   Michael Hingson  20:42 part of it comes down to the fact that there's no real manual to be a parent is there? No, no. And so parents always seem to have to learn from the beginning. And I don't know how we fix that either. But it'd be nice if there were a manual around to help parents really learn to be parents and give parents guidance. I've heard a number of people today talk about how it's okay to reach out, which is something that a lot of people are afraid to do or just don't do, but but the fact is, that the best manual we have is communicating and learning to converse with each other. And letting other people share their views and their thoughts with us. And we synthesize it to come up with what we think is the best solution.   Denise Belisle  21:34 Yes, yeah, I agree with that.   Michael Hingson  21:38 When it is definitely a challenge to parent today. It's gotta be, as I said, really tough to be a kid today, there are so many other and then diversion things that make it harder. And that's got to be scary for parents as well.   Juliana Nahas  21:56 It's really been a challenge for all concerned, we need to go back to basics though, and keep things as simple as possible. So knowing that, you know, the TV or the video or the game is not really a babysitter, and limiting the time on electronics, maybe two, three hours at the most for the day. And then send those kids in the backyard, let them play if you don't have a backyard, take them to the park, walk with them yourself and spend time talking, spend time at the dinner table? Well, that alone has shown to create such good mental health for the children is spending time together as a family eating so we can start with small steps, and then increase as we get momentum as we gain knowledge. There's so many books and programs out there for parents. You know, I'm not a parenting coach and doctor, but I know those tools are available for   Denise Belisle  22:48 them. Yeah, I go, or no go ahead.   Art Giser  22:53 And a set of tools. And I want to make it clear, I'm not a parent. And I'm always when my clients who were parents would ask me for advice that go, Well, you know, I'm not a parent. But try this, this really weird, it almost always works. So I just wanted to be clear, but one things I've taught parents is you can actually work with the energy, particularly of young children, like if a child's having nightmares, you can change the energy in the room and in their nightmare. So go away stuff. And the thing is, it's really, really easy. So parents that are interested in open to this, you can learn how to do energy work in a way not to control your kids, but just like you would set up the environment at home to be good for them and enough lighting somewhere to study. You can set up the energy environments for them. And it's huge, it has a huge effect. Yeah, kids, kids know when you're trying to control them. I'm sorry, go ahead.   Denise Belisle  23:49 No, yeah, for sure. They do know when they want to be controlled. But what I was going to get at is also for what you brought in, in the previous question, Michael about how your parents made the decision that you were a human being and you were going to not going to get stuff and you could do whatever you want. And I think parents has to to give more freedom to their children in a way of allowing them to discover different things because besides the the electronics but it's also the fear of having the kids play outside because there's been so much trauma about you know, people being kidnapped or kids being snatched or who knows what when depending on the neighborhood you live in, but be able to play with all of that and allow them to discover for their self worth with what makes them happy. What's their joy the kids right what do they want? Do they want and put them in exercise like if they want to be clowns were put them in a clown class, you know if they want to and allow them to express themselves in a more positive way.   Michael Hingson  24:57 I think that in reality It is it is really tough to be a parent to you know, because there are so many things, as you said, there's kidnappings, there's drugs, there's so many things. There's social media, there are so many temptations for kids today, which is all the more reason why, although it takes time. But parents need to take the time to parent and work with their kids, it's if they're going to become parents, and it's kind of the obligation. And I know that there any number of people who just send that responsibility off elsewhere, but the fact of the matter is that no one can do it like a parent. And if it means letting the kids play outside, then watch them or make sure that you have a plan that, that there's, there's always somebody or somebodies watching them, but let them play, let them explore. And let them understand that it's okay to do all that. But at the same time, you want them to be responsible to stay in touch with you, because otherwise things can happen. And it is different than it used to be. I remember growing up in a very well in a pretty rural town in California. From five years old on, I walked around the neighborhood, I walked to school, I wrote a bike to school, I did all of that sort of stuff. And I and I and I'm sure that it's even, in some ways, just because of the nature of things tougher for girls, but there are things that happen. And we all need to make sure that we supervise what's occurring but let let kids be kids. Yeah.   Juliana Nahas  26:43 Yeah. Right. And also, I wanted to add everything that you've all said is wonderful. But it's never too late to start parenting again. I've seen that with some teenagers where the parents said, No, it's I was too busy when they're growing up and other teams, and it's probably hopeless to try to parent them and said, No, it's not hopeless. You start now you can mend the relationship, you can foster stronger bonds, you can teach and impart your values to your kids, it's never too late to get back on that horse and be a parent, even if your child is 40. I would say, it's never too late to parent, you can always step back into the picture and the apparent I   Michael Hingson  27:23 think the difference when you're older, and let's say starting being a teenager, and and growing is that there may be more questions because or push push back that you have to discuss, because they've learned more, they've learned how to be articulate, but that's okay, too.   Denise Belisle  27:42 Yeah, well. And that's why Also, it's important for the parents to take care of their own mental mental health, and their own strength to able to handle all these changes as as kids are growing up and being able to control their own fear, their own emotion, their own saboteurs in my, in my, in my way of teaching, right, like can be able to, not to give those fears to their children. So when you can handle yourself, you can, you can teach your children to be more positive and more, more serene as they grow. They also   Art Giser  28:24 think sometimes it's wonderful, the parents are saving up money for their child's education and stuff. But in times, I've told parents and obviously, some people are barely getting by, but there are people that I go, you know, spending a little money getting little help around the house, or you weren't so nervous and upset all the time. Might be better than them going to Harvard, you know, maybe it's okay, if they go to the local aid school, and, and really, you know, parents. I mean, my father was a fantastic human being on all level, but he worked killer hours, he was one of the early computer guys in the 50s. And it can be a different break down the middle of night, and he loved it. But he died young, he stressed himself a lot. And, and I remember a friend of mine going, she goes well, you know, your father inadvertently taught you that if you're a good man, you work really hard, and you don't take care of yourself. Anyway. Oops. So I mean, I think part of it for parents crying, you know, sometimes it's like, if you can get a cleaner and occasionally or, you know, whatever you can do to take quickly for single women. Oh, my God, I don't know. I can't imagine how they do it. Single professional women, or any kind of working woman   Michael Hingson  29:38 Well, or are married women, and so on. Malcolm Gladwell, the guy who created the concept of the ticket tipping point. In his book, David and Goliath, said something that that you just brought to mind are talking about going to Harvard and so on. And what he talked about was that you don't need to necessarily go to Harvard and MIT He may not be as well off going to Harvard is another another type of college like and he used the example of Hartwick College in New York. The idea being isn't it better perhaps to be a bigger fish in a small pond, then be a small fish in a big pond, even though you might have all the smarts and all the rights and the capability of being in a Harvard because it is the kind of school that it is, might you be even better off, going to a smaller college and being able to enhance your life in ways that you wouldn't get at a place like Harvard? Not only did I know I chose to go to a small college, I went to the University of California, Irvine, when I first started going there. It was this huge campus with three or four buildings. In fact, the year I entered was the first year they had a graduating class. But I wouldn't trade the experience of being in a smaller college for anything in the world, because not only the personal attention, but the interaction with students and the greater camaraderie. Yeah, for sure. Should I went to UC Santa Cruz. There you go. It was new small. There were 2000 acres and 2000 students. When were you there? 68 To 72 Same time. Yeah, I thought it might be similar. The only thing different about Santa Cruz was you had the boardwalk. Nice, the Santa Cruz Boardwalk. I went to I went for a six week summer course at the University of California Santa Cruz before my freshman year and they took us all to the boardwalk. But the same thing it was a new campus and I wouldn't trade the experiences for anything at all, all of you have programs and things that you do Can each of you tell us a little bit about what you what exactly you do what your programs are? And maybe even tell us how we can or people can reach out to you and if you'd like to do that. Who wants to start well I will oh there you go. Glad somebody is brave   Art Giser  32:28 I tend to be guy strange enough to jump in but there we go. So again, Art Giser creator of energetic NLP, I have everything from online on demand programs to that plus group coaching three year long mastermind in my superpower is clearing people's unconscious blocks in their spiritual energetic blocks to opening up more and more of their full potential to live a miraculous life. I have a free offer I can mention to people I have a program if people go to Blockbuster so like one word the word block the word Buster, the number seven like Lucky seven.com So blockBuster7.com It's for short videos, it teach people some really powerful really simple energy techniques for clearing blocks to them being happier more successful   Michael Hingson  33:21 I believe healthier I can't scientifically prove that and I highly recommend it and they're they're fun and they're easy and he says modestly people tell me it's really helpful. So on a previous podcast episode I got a chance to meet Dr. Gabe Roberts who talks about holographic memory and and programming with regression and so on if you guys have met it sounds like you'd have a lot in common. Oh, that sounds really interesting. Yeah, he's a fascinating guy. He's in Kansas but you you might want to hunt him down I think you guys would have a lot of great notes to compare because you sound very similar in a lot of the things that you do. Oh great so so blockbuster seven comm if people want to reach out to you again directly is there an email address or another way to do that?   Art Giser  34:13 Yeah, so Art#energeticNLP or neuro linguistic programming.com So art at the word energetic NLP like Nancy Larry Peter .com   Denise Belisle  34:27 AR t right. All right, AR T   Michael Hingson  34:29 AR T art and you're not mark are cool to these.   Denise Belisle  34:37 So I'll go next. For me, I what I have to offer is I'm I offer a program where you learn to discovered your Saboteurs and a way to increase your Sage power which is the more positive mindset and that's a two month program that can be in one One on one or in groups, and that allow people to go through a series of videos and an exercise and either a one on one or group coaching, where they will learn to, to handle those saboteurs recognize them learning tools, exercise, which is a little bit similar to NLP in some ways of how to do little exercise and meditation to really learn to quiet down or saboteurs and enhancer sage and working towards you know, graduating two months later. And you at least you know, the technique, it's almost like reading a book, and it's self help. And then for those that want to continue on and really anchor that knowledge and really anchor that information and really become expert well, they can continue to work for me for several months, two months to four months after that, if they really want to work and understanding the full hide years of that, so they can find me at DeniseBelisle.com I will spell that Denise D E N I S E . Last name is Belisle B like Bob E L l S L E the denisebelisle.com. And in there there is information on how to reach me my email is denise@denisebelisle.com. So I'm sure the My name will be in the in the the information of the show. And then you can reach me there. There's an assessment you can do there and they'll recommend you do the assessment and then we can have a conversation afterwards to go over your Saboteurs and explain to you how they are interfering in your life. And then if you want to move forward and we can work on that,   Michael Hingson  36:45 spell your last name once more, please   Denise Belisle  36:47 B like Bravo, B E L I S L E.   Michael Hingson  36:54 And then what was after I s like center. Okay, yes, like Santa Le Le. Okay, great. People   Denise Belisle  37:01 would say Belisle a little bit like Carlisle. Yeah. So Bill Belisle. Great. Thank you   Michael Hingson  37:10 Juliana   Juliana Nahas  37:12 So I am a practicing pediatrician. In Georgia, my website is Covingtonpediatrics.com. On there, you will find an application to get a free consultation to see if what your child is going through and can help with and for a good fit. There's also links to lead magnets like PDFs on depression or ADHD. And I have a mini course that's about to be launched, understanding pediatric ADHD, autism, depression and anxiety. And although I do general pediatrics, the mental health piece has become more of a niche for me, because of COVID. And even before COVID, there's been an increase in the need for help with children. And there's not a lot of mental health providers. So I do take on that niche and I help them holistically, not just with medication. So I feel like I'm uniquely positioned to serve this population, and there's a great need out there. So I help people do reach out and   Michael Hingson  38:14 ask for help. So you give your website is that the best way to reach you? Is there an email   Juliana Nahas  38:18 website? No, the websites the best   Michael Hingson  38:21 Covington because   Juliana Nahas  38:22 there's an application process. Covington pediatrics, calm,   Michael Hingson  38:26 calm. Okay. So I have to ask all of you does anybody do a podcast? I'm I did one years ago, I am going to start one again. Mid Year or something. Next year 2022. I did 115 years ago. And unfortunately though, I stopped doing it.   Denise Belisle  38:50 I don't have a podcast at the moment. I will have one probably in March or something like that. I do live I do Facebook Live and LinkedIn live on my platform, which is Facebook. That the knees below something like that. And I'm also a show host that is also live and recorded on winwin woman.tv. So there's a new platform where we have a woman show host so but the podcast is on its way. Nice to have a podcast Juliana,   Juliana Nahas  39:24 I don't know.   Michael Hingson  39:27 Well, for for anyone who's going to be starting one if you need a guest I'd love to explore it. Maybe we can find ways to have relevant things to talk about. But I will say that we have very much enjoyed having all of you on you have all been great. And if you'd like to do more of this individually and go into more detail, I would love to do that. If that makes sense to any or all of you. Would you like to do that? Yeah,   Denise Belisle  39:55 thanks. Love to yes all around.   Michael Hingson  39:59 Very Whoa, then we will definitely make that happen. But I really appreciate you coming on the show today and giving people a chance to learn about you. It's it's fun. This definitely is a podcast episode that falls into the unexpected part of where diversity, inclusion, diversity in the unexpected meet. Because originally, we didn't plan on this being a panel, but this has just worked out extremely well.   Juliana Nahas  40:25 Okay, Mike,   Michael Hingson  40:25 really enjoyable.   Denise Belisle  40:26 And I'm glad I did. Thank you so much.   Michael Hingson  40:29 Well, thank you all and for everyone who is listening, please go to wherever you get podcasts and give us a five star rating. We would appreciate it I'd love to hear from you. If you have comments, or thoughts or suggestions about this podcast or episode or any of our episodes, please feel free to reach out to me at Michael H AI at accessiBe.com. That's M I C H A E L H I at accessiBe A C C E S S I B E.com. accessiBe is a company that works to make websites accessible and inclusive for all persons with disabilities. And that's a long story in of itself. And we won't go into it here. Otherwise, we'll be here another hour plus. But I would love to hear from anyone listening to the show with your thoughts and comments and things that you'd like to see if any of you both those of you here as well as people listening, have any ideas for or you want to be a guest on our podcasts, please email me reach out, we'd love to have you. Also you can subscribe to our newsletters and podcasts by going to www dot Michael hingson. That's EMI ch AE l h i n g s o n.com/podcast. And you can listen to all past episodes. We'd love to hear from you there. And again, if you'd like to explore being a guest or sign up for our newsletters, that's the place to do it. So thank you all again for coming to unstoppable mindset on either side of the mic, and we look forward to see you again in the future and with another episode.   UM Intro/Outro  42:14 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.

The Personality Movement
Recovering From Autism! with Dr. Juliana Nahas Sponsored By APSOW #153

The Personality Movement

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2021 23:33


Follow her on Facebook Here! Connect on LinkedIn Here! Make sure you check out her website and take her FREE 10 part course!! Click Here! Dr Nahas's private practice in Covington, GA is 45 minutes east of Atlanta, GA. For more than 20 years, Dr Nahas has provided general pediatric care to the children of Newton, Rockdale , Walton and Jasper counties, guiding parents with a holistic touch. In 2016, after observing the growing trend of ADHD and Autism in her patients, she began researching options for the best integrative solutions, in order to recover the health of these patients, as more and more parents were asking Dr Nahas for less medication use, and more natural ways to remedy their kids. Dr Nahas is glad to have found the answers through exploring Functional Medicine, and to be able to now offer a cutting edge approach to managing acute and chronic health conditions , like asthma, eczema, headaches, abdominal pain and an array of autoimmune conditions, as well as neurodevelopmental conditions like autism and ADHD. Get Your Copy of Wellness Wisdom Here! Thank you APSOW! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/alexander-trefney7/message

Edge of NFT Podcast
John Nahas and Jay Kurahashi-Sofue of Avalanche, Plus: TikTok's Messy NFT Gambit, FTX Solana-NFTs, NFT Rentals, And More...

Edge of NFT Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2021 64:30


As the digital world evolves, NFTs become an ever more serious investment option within a decentralized online community. This savvy community craves open-source solutions that are fast and accurate. Enter Avalanche, the first decentralized smart contacts platform built for the scale of global finance with near-instant transaction finality. Avalanche‘s John Nahas and Jay Kurahashi-Sofue join Jeff Kelley, Eathan Janney, and Josh Kriger to talk about the various projects they are working on, especially their collaboration with Topps Baseball Cards. John and Jay delve into their mission to make NFTs more accessible through incentive programs. They also discuss various hot topics, from TikTok's messy NFT gambit to the latest developments in NFT rentals.More from Edge of NFT:

The DLR Cast
Episode 43: Interview With Artist Margo Z. Nahas (Creator Of Van Halen‘s ”1984” Album Cover)

The DLR Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 45:06


At the top, it's a bit melancholy as Darren and Steve discuss the 1-year anniversary of Eddie Van Halen's passing (10/6), talk some more about Dave's big retirement announcement, the passing of time, and Dave's upcoming birthday (10/10). Then, things lighten up as Darren talks with artist Margo Z. Nahas. Margo is the artist who created the most iconic Van Halen album cover of them all, "1984." There's all sorts of fun and cool info about making of that iconic album cover and much more. Check out Margo's work at Instagram at @miss_go_go and check out www.vanhalen1984.com for more about that album cover.

Locked On MLB Prospects
Prospect Interview: Joe Nahas (Cubs) - Part 2

Locked On MLB Prospects

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2021 28:30


Part 2 of the interview with Cubs right-handed pitching prospect, Joe Nahas! Joe talks about why he decided to chose the Cubs over the other offers on the table, how he has trained during this Covid year, the two new pitches he added to his arsenal and his outlook on the upcoming season. All that and more in our latest prospect interview! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Locked On MLB Prospects
Prospect Interview: Joe Nahas (Cubs) - Part 1

Locked On MLB Prospects

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2021 17:57


Part 1 of the 2 part interview with Cubs right-handed pitching prospect, Joe Nahas. Nahas was signed as an undrafted free agent in 2019 by the Cubs setting a franchise record for an UDFA with a $125K signing bonus. Joe shares his story of how he went from undrafted to having several max offers on the table after an incredible showing in the Cape Cod League.Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKEDON,” and you'll get 20% off your next order.BetOnline AGThere is only 1 place that has you covered and 1 place we trust. Betonline.ag! Sign up today for a free account at betonline.ag and use that promocode: LOCKEDON for your 50% welcome bonus. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices