Podcasts about Neta

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Best podcasts about Neta

Latest podcast episodes about Neta

El Atole
LAS SORPRESAS DE LA COPA MUNDIAL DE LA FIFA 2026™️

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2026 17:40 Transcription Available


Esta semana hablamos sobre los partidos tumbaquinielas de los primeros días de la Copa Mundial de la FIFA 2026™️. ¿Neta no pudieron meterle un gol a Cabo Verde? Escucha el episodio.

El Atole
¡NARCOFEST!

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2026 21:35 Transcription Available


Esta semana en el Atole Podcast hablamos del evento del 1 de junio del 2026 donde se planteó una postura frente a los marco políticos señalados. ¿Neta van a usar otra vez el pretexto de la soberanía? Escucha el episodio.

Brasil Paralelo | Podcast
COMO A NETA DE MUSSOLINI CONQUISTOU O BIG BROTHER

Brasil Paralelo | Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2026 13:38


A história europeia contemporânea é repleta de reviravoltas singulares, mas poucas trajetórias são tão inesperadas quanto a de Alessandra Mussolini. Neta do ditador Benito Mussolini e sobrinha da consagrada atriz Sophia Loren, Alessandra construiu uma vida pública marcada por dualidades profundas. Após transitar pela carreira artística e musical, ingressou na política partidária na década de 1990, defendendo historicamente o legado familiar e aliando-se a coalizões de direita no Parlamento italiano e no Parlamento Europeu. Contudo, os anos recentes trouxeram uma revisão radical em suas visões de mundo. Afastada dos cargos públicos, ela surpreendeu a opinião pública ao alinhar-se a pautas associadas à esquerda progressista e tornar-se defensora da comunidade LGBTQ+. Em 2026, sua jornada ganhou um capítulo definitivo no entretenimento de massa com sua vitória no reality show Grande Fratello VIP. Neste vídeo, a Brasil Paralelo analisa como a cultura pop e a espetacularização da vida privada operam na sociedade moderna, possuindo a capacidade de mitigar a densidade dos fatos históricos em prol do carisma individual.

El Atole
¡NO NOS VAN A CALLAR!

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2026 18:07 Transcription Available


Esta semana en el Atole Podcast hablamos sobre el mensaje de censura de la presidenta. ¿Neta no vean TV Azteca? Escucha el episodio.

Convidado Extra
Rita GT: “Quantas vidas temos dentro de uma só vida?”

Convidado Extra

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2026 40:52


Neta do inventor do algodão-doce no Porto, Rita GT, artista versátil, é muito criativa desde criança. Abraçou o mundo com projetos, adora colaborações e orgulha-se muito do novo MUZEU de Braga.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Cool Weird Awesome with Brady Carlson
Neta Snook Was The Pioneering Pilot Who Taught Amelia Earhart How To Fly

Cool Weird Awesome with Brady Carlson

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2026 3:55


Today in 1932, Amelia Earhart became the first woman and only the second person to make a nonstop solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean. But she wasn't the first female pilot - in fact, she learned to fly from another well-known woman aviator. Plus: around this time in 2006, a park in Boston got an odd new addition now known as the Jamaica Pond Bench. Neta Snook (Ames History)What's up with the bizarre U-shaped bench in Jamaica Plain? (Boston.com) Wing on over to our Patreon page and back our show

Resumão Diário
Troca de bilhetes em presídio deu origem à investigação que levou à prisão de Deolane Bezerra; Justiça francesa condena Airbus e Air France por tragédia que matou 228 pessoas em 2009 e mais

Resumão Diário

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2026 6:14


Troca de bilhetes em presídio deu origem à investigação que levou à prisão de Deolane Bezerra. Justiça francesa condena Airbus e Air France por tragédia que matou 228 pessoas em 2009. Helicóptero cai em Pomerode e corpo de piloto é encontrado carbonizado. Câmara aprova projeto que reduz área de proteção na Amazônia. Neta de Mussolini vence o 'Big Brother' italiano e leva prêmio de R$ 3,3 milhões.

El Atole
RUBÉN ROCHA MOYA: NARCOPARTIDO EN JAQUE.

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2026 14:37 Transcription Available


Esta semana en el Atole Podcast hablamos sobre la destitución de Rubén Rocha Moya en medio del cónclave morenista. ¿Neta se van a hacer weyes con esto? Escucha el episodio.

El Mañanero Radio
Toci Neta revela lo que no le gusta a los sanky - Miguel Alcantara

El Mañanero Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 11:12 Transcription Available


Conviértete en un supporter de este podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/el-mananero-radio--3086101/support.

Jose Candeias - HÀ Conversa
Mª do Carmo surpreendida pela neta Joana no seu aniversário

Jose Candeias - HÀ Conversa

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2026 5:03


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Igreja Presbiteriana Moriah
A tragédia na vinha | Marcos 12.1-12 (Ep. 45)

Igreja Presbiteriana Moriah

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2026 51:14


Jesus conta uma parábola para revelar a tragédia vivenciada pelo povo de Israel em sua jornada de ser benção para todos os povos. Neta parábola o Mestre quer revelar que todos que são chamados pela graça também são vocacionados para uma missão transformadora . Pregação do Rev. David Horta no Culto do dia 29 de março de 2026 na IP Moriah em Americana-SP.

El Atole
DERRAME EN VERACRUZ…¡PLAYAS CONTAMINADAS!

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2026 15:05 Transcription Available


Esta semana en el Atole Podcast, una producción de Azteca Noticias, hablamos sobre la desastre medioambiental en las costas de Veracruz. ¿Neta tenemos playas limpias?

Reportagem
50 anos do golpe na Argentina: “Procurei meu filho e encontrei minha neta”, conta avó da Praça de Maio

Reportagem

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2026 7:57


Nenhuma outra ditadura na América do Sul sequestrou, torturou e matou tanto quanto a da Argentina, em apenas sete anos. O golpe de Estado de 1976 completa 50 anos na próxima terça-feira (24). Cerca de 400 bebês e crianças foram roubados, muitas vezes ao nascerem no cativeiro onde suas mães eram mantidas sob tortura, e destinados a famílias de militares e policiais ou a casais amigos dos torturadores. Buscarita Roa, uma Avó da Praça de Maio, ainda procura o filho, sequestrado pela ditadura argentina, mas conseguiu recuperar a neta, Claudia, criada por militares. Márcio Resende, correspondente da RFI em Buenos Aires Em 1971, aos 16 anos, José Liborio Poblete Roa, o “Pepe”, perdeu as duas pernas ao cair de um trem no qual viajava de forma improvisada para evitar o custo da passagem entre Santiago e Curicó, no Chile. Um mês depois, ao receber alta médica, o jovem decidiu que queria estudar medicina, deixando seu país natal para iniciar uma nova vida na Argentina. Pepe gastou toda a indenização recebida da companhia ferroviária em uma cadeira de rodas e em uma viagem a Buenos Aires para tratamento ortopédico. “Quando lhe dei um beijo no hospital, ele me disse: ‘Mãe, por favor, não chore, porque eu serei o primeiro homem a correr com uma perna ortopédica'. Quando voltou para casa no mês seguinte, disse que haviam cortado suas pernas, mas não sua cabeça; que queria estudar medicina e começar uma nova vida na Argentina. Para mim, foi uma lição de vida”, recorda Buscarita Roa, de 88 anos, em entrevista à RFI na sede da Associação Avós da Praça de Maio. À época, o Chile era um país pobre e a vizinha Argentina, o “primo rico” da região, contava com sistemas de saúde e educação exemplares. Em dezembro de 1975, Buscarita Roa decidiu deixar a localidade chilena de La Cisterna, ao sul de Santiago, para ficar com o filho mais velho, levando com ela os outros seis filhos. “O meu filho tinha 23 anos quando desapareceu — praticamente a mesma idade da minha neta quando a reencontrei. Ele lutava por um mundo melhor. Em casa, faltava comida, mas ele levava um pão à escola para dividir com quem não tinha. Às vezes, quase não comia para poder compartilhar. Até hoje preparo um lanche e o deixo pendurado na porta de casa para quem precisar”, conta Buscarita. No instituto de reabilitação onde morava, Pepe conheceu a argentina Gertrudis Marta Hlaczik, conhecida como “Trudi”. Os dois se apaixonaram e tiveram Claudia. Com outros jovens do instituto, Pepe fundou a Frente de Aleijados Peronistas, uma organização política de esquerda que reunia cerca de 200 militantes. O peronismo seria alvo da ditadura argentina, instaurada em 24 de março de 1976, há 50 anos. O sequestro Em 28 de novembro de 1978, o casal e a bebê de oito meses foram sequestrados por militares e levados ao centro clandestino de prisão, tortura e extermínio em Buenos Aires, chamado pelos próprios torturadores de “El Olimpo”, pois se consideravam deuses sobre a vida dos cerca de 500 sequestrados que por ali passaram — a maioria até hoje desaparecida, como Pepe e Trudi. Buscarita Roa relembra à RFI o cenário que encontrou ao chegar à casa do filho, no dia do sequestro, para cuidar da neta: “Eu cuidava da Claudia enquanto eles trabalhavam. Quando cheguei de manhã, encontrei a casa destruída: janelas quebradas, porta arrombada no chão. Uma vizinha me disse: ‘Ontem à noite vieram um caminhão do Exército e uma viatura policial. Derrubaram tudo e os levaram embora'”, relembra. “Comecei a procurá-los. Encontrei outras pessoas que também buscavam seus familiares. Depois descobri que havia muitos casos. Reuníamo-nos numa igreja, todos chorando, sem conseguir encontrar nossos filhos. Era algo espantoso”, descreve, emocionada. Dois dias depois, o então coronel Ceferino Landa, que não podia ter filhos, foi ao centro clandestino e levou Claudia. Ele se apropriou da menina, mudou seu nome para Mercedes Beatriz Landa Moreira e a criou como filha até ela completar quase 22 anos. A informação sobre o destino do casal só surgiu anos depois, com investigações realizadas após o retorno da democracia na Argentina. Segundo a Comissão Nacional sobre o Desaparecimento de Pessoas (CONADEP), Trudi e Pepe foram “terrivelmente torturados”. Durante anos, Buscarita procurou, sem sucesso, pelo filho, pela nora e pela neta. No início, era acompanhada pela mãe de Trudi, que acabou entrando em depressão e cometeu suicídio. Na época, Buscarita trabalhava como supervisora de limpeza no Ministério do Planejamento da Argentina, a apenas quatro quarteirões da Praça de Maio. O ministério era repleto de militares. Para não levantar suspeitas, mantinha silêncio no trabalho; depois do expediente, saía em busca da família sequestrada. A cada dia, encontrava mais casos semelhantes ao seu. Avó da Praça de Maio Um dia, ao passar pela Praça, viu várias mulheres com lenços brancos na cabeça. Curiosa, perguntou por que estavam reunidas ali. Descobriu que procuravam seus filhos e netos desaparecidos. Foi nesse momento que Buscarita se tornou uma Avó da Praça de Maio. Hoje, é vice-presidente de um dos mais importantes organismos de direitos humanos do mundo. “Comecei a fazer as rondas, chorando sem parar, porque era terrorífico. Minha nora, minha neta e meu filho… não era fácil viver. E eu precisava entrar no Ministério do Planejamento, cheio de militares da ditadura, aparentando tranquilidade para que ninguém percebesse o que eu estava passando”, conta. A postura era essencial. No fim de 1977, mães da Praça de Maio — Esther Ballestrino, María Eugenia Ponce e a fundadora Azucena Villaflor — também foram sequestradas e lançadas vivas nos chamados “voos da morte”, método usado para eliminar prisioneiros: eram jogados de aviões, geralmente dopados e nus. Até hoje, as poucas Mães da Praça de Maio ainda vivas percorrem a praça religiosamente às quintas-feiras. Já realizaram 2.501 rondas desde abril de 1977, quando passaram a usar lenços na cabeça para se reconhecerem e tiveram de circular continuamente, já que reuniões eram proibidas pelo estado de sítio. Seis meses depois, em outubro de 1977, algumas perceberam que também precisavam procurar os netos, dando origem às Avós da Praça de Maio. “Eu procurava pelos três: meu filho, minha nora e minha neta. As marchas davam visibilidade. Jornalistas do mundo todo começaram a aparecer. Foi assim que mães e avós da Praça de Maio se tornaram conhecidas”, diz Buscarita. “Anos depois, soube que minha neta havia sido apropriada. Nas Avós da Praça de Maio recebemos a informação de que bebês e crianças eram entregues a militares e policiais. O problema era descobrir por quem”, explica. A descoberta Graças às campanhas na mídia e às investigações judiciais, uma denúncia anônima apontou uma jovem como possível vítima de apropriação ilegal. As datas e descrições coincidiam. O exame de DNA, no início de 2000, confirmou: era Claudia. “Como dizer a uma jovem de 21 anos: ‘Você é minha neta?' Não é fácil. Foi preciso paciência, equilíbrio e espera. Aos poucos, conseguimos conquistá-la”, relata Buscarita. “Desde muito jovem, eu sentia que algo estava errado. Meus apropriadores — as pessoas que eu pensava serem meus pais — eram muito mais velhos. Meus colegas achavam que fossem meus avós. Eles tinham quase 50 anos em 1978”, conta Claudia Poblete à RFI. “Escondiam documentos e diziam que não tinham fotos da gravidez porque haviam sido roubadas.” No início, Claudia passou a chamar o casal que a criou pelos nomes; depois, passou a se referir a eles como “apropriadores”. Hoje, não mantém mais contato e afirma que eles nunca demonstraram arrependimento. “Mesmo assim, mantive vínculo com eles por um tempo. Quando minha filha nasceu, ela se parecia muito comigo e com fotos minhas de bebê com meus pais biológicos. Foi um choque. Comecei a entender o que significa ser mãe”, diz. “Passei a refletir sobre o que minha mãe viveu: a gravidez, a separação, o sequestro. E percebi que, para meus apropriadores, tudo aquilo fazia parte do cotidiano — eles mentiram para mim todos os dias.” Claudia demorou a assimilar sua história, e a família temeu perdê-la. Foram necessários mais cinco anos para que acontecesse o primeiro abraço. “Num momento de descuido, nos abraçamos pela primeira vez e choramos. Foi muito forte. Senti como se Pepe e a mãe dela estivessem ali. Então pensei: ‘Filho, cumpri minha missão. Aqui está sua filha'”, desabafa Buscarita. Passaram-se 26 anos desde o reencontro, mas permanece um vazio entre avó e neta. “Sinto a perda irreparável daqueles vinte anos que nos foram roubados. Quando a abraço, percebo que há algo que nunca poderemos recuperar. É triste”, diz Claudia. “Ao mesmo tempo, é um privilégio tê-la. Muitos netos recuperam a identidade quando a avó já não está mais viva.” A procura continua Buscarita ainda procura pelo filho e pela nora; Claudia, agora, busca pelos pais. “Encontrar os corpos nos permitiria entender o que aconteceu e começar a fechar essa ferida. Enquanto não sabemos, ela permanece aberta”, afirma Claudia. “No fundo, sei que os mataram. Seria um milagre encontrá-los vivos. Mas queremos ao menos saber onde estão os restos. Mesmo que seja um pequeno fragmento, já seria uma bênção. Poder tocá-los e dar-lhes uma sepultura cristã me permitiria morrer em paz”, diz Buscarita, emocionada. No início da ditadura, crianças já nascidas eram entregues como abandonadas a instituições e adotadas com apoio de juízes. Com o aumento do sequestro de grávidas, surgiu uma segunda fase: o plano sistemático de roubo de bebês. Posteriormente, quando as Avós da Praça de Maio ganharam visibilidade, iniciou-se uma terceira fase: o roubo era disfarçado, registrando-se a criança como abandonada por poucas horas antes de sua entrega a militares, com aparência de legalidade. As Avós estimam que cerca de 400 netos foram sequestrados. Até agora, 140 foram recuperados. Claudia foi a neta número 64. Alguns corpos de mulheres foram encontrados ainda com o feto — assassinadas grávidas. O plano sistemático e perverso de roubo de bebês foi uma prática singular da ditadura argentina.

Cultura
Retrospectiva em Paris revisita cinco décadas de imagens de Nan Goldin entre arte, política e memória

Cultura

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2026 8:53


This Will Not End Well, em cartaz no Grand Palais e na Capela Saint-Louis da Salpêtrière, oferece uma visão inédita em Paris da obra de Nan Goldin, norte-americana que acaba de completar 70 anos como estrela inconteste da fotografia mundial. Goldin descreve seu trabalho no material da mostra e dá o tom da curadoria que recupera cinco décadas de um trabalho intenso, cru e cheio de empatia : “Sempre quis ser cineasta. Meus slideshows são filmes compostos de fotos”.   Márcia Bechara, da RFI em Paris A mostra, aberta a partir de quarta-feira (18) para o público na capital francesa, ocupa o Salão de Honra do Grand Palais e a Capela Saint-Louis da Salpêtrière, onde está sendo apresentada a instalação Sisters, Saints and Sibyls, concebida em 2004 para o Festival de Outono de Paris. Apesar de não ter podido estar presente na coletiva de imprensa em 17 de março por problemas de saúde, a presença da artista é sentida em cada detalhe da mostra. A seu pedido, Goldin foi substituída, durante a coletiva em Paris, por uma longa e pungente mensagem gravada por ela e um vídeo de apoio aos palestinos e à Faixa de Gaza, projetado nas paredes do Grand Palais. O curador sueco Fredrik Liew, responsável pela retrospectiva e diretor de exposições e coleções do Moderna Museet, em Estocolmo, acredita se tratar de “um grande erro quando se pensa nessa mensagem política como algo separado do resto da exposição". "Pelo que entendo da prática de Nan, o que me engaja é a dedicação dela às outras pessoas, à empatia e a como vivemos juntos. O que está acontecendo no mundo — populismo, terror, guerra — são consequências da falta de empatia. Nan propõe, com seu trabalho, mostrar o ser humano, estar junto e se esforçar para construir um mundo melhor”, observou à RFI. Gaza, AIDS e a convergência de lutas Ao longo das últimas décadas, a fotógrafa Nan Goldin tem criado imagens marcantes que exploram a poética do pessoal. Mais do que qualquer outro artista de sua estatura, Goldin tem usado seu sucesso para denunciar a ganância dos poderosos, desde a resposta lenta do governo norte-americano à crise da AIDS, que matou tantos de seus amigos na década de 1980, até o lucro da indústria farmacêutica e a epidemia de overdoses que ela desencadeou. Neta de judeus asquenazes da Polônia, ela passou os últimos anos, em suas próprias palavras, "consumida" pela destruição de Gaza e de seu povo. No início de 2026, ela e seu editor, David Sherman, começaram a costurar vídeos da Palestina – cenas de normalidade e de atrocidade, ambas – para produzir Gaza, um mosaico de dor e beleza, com imagens de antes e depois da guerra, vídeo apresentado também durante a coletiva de imprensa de lançamento de sua retrospectiva em Paris: Nan Goldin é reconhecida como uma artista maior que transita entre os séculos 20 e 21 revolucionando a fotografia contemporânea e a cultura visual. Com um título que encampa a ironia e a agudeza de seu olhar sobre o mundo, a retrospectiva This Will Not End Well (Isso Não Vai Acabar Bem, em tradução livre), no Grand Palais, é a primeira exposição na França a oferecer uma visão completa do trabalho da artista como cineasta, por meio de slideshows e vídeos.  Viagem sensorial Cada pavilhão da exposição parisiense parece pensado para contar uma história própria, transformando o percurso em um passeio sensorial pela obra de Nan Goldin. Sobre a montagem no Grand Palais, Hala Wardé, arquiteta e cenógrafa que colabora com a artista há anos, observou que “esse grande espaço parisiense acabou de ser reformado e recuperou uma luz que tinha perdido. Era importante voltar a este espaço e brincar com essa luz, mesmo que tenhamos decidido filtrá-la para manter um jogo de sombras e claridade. Aqui, no Salão de Honra — um lugar muito alto e imponente — optamos por torná-la menos densa. São cinco salas, em vez de seis como nos outros museus. A singularidade desta apresentação parisiense está na instalação de Sisters, Saints and Sibyls: ela é diferente, mas fiel à original.” Para Wardé, a luz é mais que um detalhe, “ela é o elemento que mais muda de cidade para cidade". "A luz de Paris não é a mesma de Estocolmo nem a de Milão. Decidimos torná-la menos intensa, ajustando a experiência ao espaço e à narrativa da exposição”, especificou. Sobre a disposição da obra na Capela Saint-Louis da Salpêtrière, a arquiteta detalhou que preferiu "respeitar a instalação exatamente como foi concebida para este lugar". "Inclusive, me inspirei nela para criar uma sala específica, com planta octogonal. Mantivemos toda a estrutura. Há um mezanino suspenso que provoca vertigem. A obra evoca o suicídio de sua irmã Barbara, em relação à história de Santa Bárbara. É muito intensa, e a forma como foi montada está perfeitamente adaptada a esta apresentação.” Uma narrativa viva e política Mais do que uma retrospectiva de fotografias, a mostra propõe redescobrir a obra como experiência audiovisual. O curador sueco Fredrik Liew explica: “Talvez as pessoas esperem fotografias em molduras, mas não há obras impressas. Meu convite à artista foi mostrar toda a sua prática, suas milhares de imagens, no formato de slideshows que ela produziu ao longo da carreira. Selecionamos seis para esta exposição. Essa é a curadoria dela de suas imagens, narrativas da sua obra de vida. Ela organiza todas as imagens que produz em diferentes histórias, contadas por meio desses slides e seus trabalhos em vídeo.” Ele também comentou à RFI a maneira como a artista revisita constantemente suas obras. “Ela nunca parou de trabalhar, sempre refaz. Não existe apenas uma maneira de mostrar suas obras, mas muitas, e isso se desenvolve. The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, por exemplo, quando começou a ser exibida no final dos anos 1970 e início dos anos 1980, sempre era diferente, e continua diferente a cada apresentação. Ela sempre acrescentava imagens e apresentava tudo de maneira diferente, inspirada pelos contextos dos lugares. Ela sempre vê o trabalho a partir do presente: ‘Este é meu trabalho e é assim que o vejo hoje'. Estamos apresentando Nan como cineasta e contadora de histórias. Não estamos retirando nada de sua fotografia, mas acrescentando essa dimensão”, diz. A particularidade da montagem parisiense está na reinstalação de Sisters, Saints and Sibyls, originalmente criada para a Salpêtrière. Liew observa: “O que é realmente único em Paris é poder revisitar a Salpêtrière para a instalação de Sisters, Saints and Sibyls. A obra foi criada para o Festival de Outono em 2004 e estreou nesse local. Somos muito gratos por poder reinstalá-la agora, 20 anos depois, e mostrar a um público maior, além de apresentar todo o contexto de seu trabalho na forma desta exposição no Grand Palais.” Som, emoção e diaporamas O som é parte central da narrativa de Goldin. Barbara Kroher, curadora associada em Paris, explica que "a construção narrativa de Nan é muito sutil, quase epidérmica, incluindo a trilha sonora, que tem papel central.As escolhas musicais são ecléticas: Chopin, Schubert, Velvet Underground, Maria Callas, Edmundo Rivero. O som não pode ser separado da imagem; ele guia a narrativa. Em The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, há um subtexto sonoro. Em Sisters, Saints and Sibyls, na Capela da Salpêtrière, ouvimos coros medievais e a voz de Nan, ampliando a dor que permeia a obra. Em Memory Lost, há gravações de secretárias eletrônicas dos anos 1980, acrescentando significado às imagens. O diaporama é uma forma híbrida, entre fotografia e cinema.” A exposição inclui trabalhos que exploram traumas familiares, suicídio, dependência química e relações de gênero. Wardé ressalta: “Cada sala, cada luz, cada detalhe foi pensado para que o visitante se sinta atravessando uma experiência íntima e sensorial. A obra fala de dor, mas também de empatia, de estar junto com o outro.” Contexto histórico e social Goldin é conhecida por abordar questões sociais como gênero, saúde mental e crises de dependência. Em Memory Lost, ela explora os aspectos mais sombrios da dependência química. Em 2017, fundou o grupo P.A.I.N. (Prescription Addiction Intervention Now), atuando contra a família Sackler, considerada responsável pela epidemia de overdoses de opioides, pressionando instituições a removerem o nome dos doadores de seus espaços. O trabalho da artista também documenta a vida boêmia e alternativa de Nova York entre os anos 1970 e 1990, retratando amizades, festas e relacionamentos. Em material oficial, a exposição apresenta obras icônicas como The Ballad of Sexual Dependency (1981-2022), The Other Side (1992-2021), Sisters, Saints and Sibyls (2004-2022), Memory Lost (2019-2021), Sirens (2019-2020) e Stendhal Syndrome (2024). Paris como memória e cena artística A capital francesa mantém um vínculo duradouro com a artista. Kroher contextualiza: “Nan viajou pela Europa desde jovem, morou em Paris, fotografou amigos e apresentou trabalhos aqui. Alguns amigos aparecem em suas obras, como Valérie em Standard Syndrome e Kim Harlow, ícone transgênero dos cabarés parisienses nos anos 1980. Ela tem um vínculo duradouro com a cidade e a exposição reflete isso.” A curadora francesa observa ainda o impacto do olhar de Goldin: “São histórias sobre emoções e relações humanas em toda a sua diversidade e complexidade. A empatia é constante em seu trabalho. A exposição nos mostra que a arte pode criar um senso de comunidade.” Um vilarejo de slideshows Os pavilhões formam um conjunto que funciona como um “vilarejo”, em que cada espaço é adaptado à obra que apresenta. “Cada sala, luz e arquitetura dialogam com os slideshows, reforçando a intimidade e a narrativa política da obra, conduzindo o visitante por trajetórias de memória, emoção e cinema”, explica Wardé. This Will Not End Well fica em cartaz até 21 de junho de 2026 no o Salão de Honra do Grand Palais e na Capela Saint-Louis da Salpêtrière, em Paris.

The Last Standee
109: Archetypal Re-sources (Neta-tanka, Bubzium, The Old King's Crown)

The Last Standee

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2026 77:53


In the end, we are all either Standees or Meeples. It's just that "meeple" is kind of trademarked. No, really, go checking if you need. Done? Well, welcome to episode 109 of The Last Standee Podcast! In the grand scheme of things, we belong to the standee category. Mostly copy-left, done with whatever arts&craft project brought us into existence. It was messy. Anyway! This is the episode where we talk about sources and resources! After the usual catch-up, we have Cara talk about Neta-tanka, a resource management game with some noteworthy mechanichs she... liked? Disliked? Look, it's complicated. That's why she made a review. It has to do with archetypes. Everything has. It's the meeple/standee thing from above, cranked up to "existential". But speaking of archetypes, there's Alexis with Bubzium, the next great sourcebook from Hollow Press, you'll remember them from Vermis, maybe. Anyway, I won't even start describing it here, because words will fail the experience. All we can comfortably say is that Hollow Press found their niche, and comfortably so. We kept the dessert for last. Mix in resources, and a good source worldbuilding, in the archetypal old kingdom, to talk about The Old King's Crown with Alessio, a dear, endearing game from late summer 2025 which is getting on and off the BGG Hotness these last days. Good timing you say? Remember that the day right after this episode is out, the "reprint + expansion" campaign will start! Hey-hey, you are welcome! As usual, happy gaming until next time!

Documentary First
Episode 272 | Quinnolyn Benson-Yates on Epic Bill: Failure, Reinvention & the Filmmaker's Endurance

Documentary First

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2026 68:51


Award-winning filmmaker Quinnolyn Benson-Yates made her first feature documentary before film school—and its seven-year journey from short film concept to PBS distribution holds lessons every indie filmmaker needs to hear.Epic Bill follows an endurance athlete who lost everything when his video rental empire collapsed (thanks, Netflix). Bill's mantra—“show up and suffer”—became Quinn's filmmaking philosophy as she navigated polar vortexes, battery failures in -50° weather, and the brutal realities of distribution. In this episode, she shares how she cut a 93-minute film down to 56 minutes for PBS, why credibility matters more than connections, and the uncomfortable truth about what distribution actually solves.DocuView Déjà Vu:Free Solo, 2018, 100 mins, Watch on on Disney + Package / Hulu, IMDB Link: Free Solo (2018) ⭐ 8.1 | Documentary, Adventure, SportMeru, 2015, 90 mins, Watch on Prime Video, IMDB Link: Meru (2015) ⭐ 7.7 | Documentary, SportCrip Camp: A Disability Revolution, 2020, 106 mins, Watch on Netflix, IMDB Link: Crip Camp (2020) ⭐ 7.7 | Documentary, HistoryWhat You'll Learn:Why “fail early, fail often” should include “fail sustainably”How archival footage transformed a short film into a featureThe PBS application process (NETA) and what it requiresWhat intermediaries like Bitmax do for Apple TV/Amazon distributionWhy distribution doesn't make your career—you doAbout Quinnolyn Benson-YatesQuinnolyn Benson-Yates is an award-winning filmmaker with an MFA from USC School of Cinematic Arts. Her feature documentary Epic Bill gained nationwide PBS distribution with promotions on CNN and SiriusXM, and is now available on Amazon and Apple TV. She's a two-time winner of Santa Barbara International Film Festival's 10-10-10 competition, and her short film Miss River screened at Palm Springs LGBTQ Film Festival. Her most recent short, a Western comedy called Man, premiered at Austin Film Festival. She's currently developing her first narrative feature about a middle school girl starting a punk band with her dad—inspired by her own childhood as an eight-year-old punk rock singer.Website: QBY | Film: Epic Bill - The Film | Instagram: @‌quinnolynIf you're enjoying the show, please subscribe and leave a review!Sponsor: Virgil Films http://www.virgilfilms.com/Support us by buying merch or watching our films: https://documentaryfirst.com/Follow our Substack Blog: https://documentaryfirst.substack.com/Join our newsletter (bottom of page): https://thegirlwhoworefreedom.com/Donate to help us tell more stories: https://givebutter.com/LivingStoriesLtdSupport us on Patreon00:00 Introduction04:27 Quinn's journey: punk rocker to USC film grad06:44 Current projects: narrative feature development08:02 Epic Bill origin: short film becomes seven-year feature10:08 Why documentaries take so long13:22 Bill's philosophy: “Show up and suffer”17:35 Applying endurance athlete lessons to filmmaking21:59 Filming in extreme conditions as a new filmmaker25:26 Fail early, fail often—fail sustainably27:01 Hardest scenes: -50° battery failures and emotional breakthroughs30:44 Bill's financial story: millionaire to bankruptcy33:57 What beliefs needed to die for Bill to succeed38:52 Leslie Murphy: the stakes character (Free Solo comparison)43:36 The PBS path: NETA application and cutting from 93 to 56 minutes46:33 Bitmax and Apple TV/Amazon distribution51:02 Deliverables that surprised her54:13 CNN and SiriusXM promotion: cold emails and pitch packets56:45 Industry Stress Test: Plan A, B, C when nobody's buying1:00:04 Uncomfortable truth: distribution doesn't make your career1:01:01 Practical tool: scene-by-scene film study method1:03:49 DocuView Déjà Vu: Free Solo, Meru, Crip Camp

La Paltía
153: La PaLtía Podcast Ep. 153: Móntense en la Carrick-Neta

La Paltía

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2026 68:52


MANCHESTER IS RED!Luego de una dominante victoria en el Manchester Derby, el querido United de Mr. Presi vuelve al sendero de la victoria tras derrotar 2-0 en Old Trafford al rival de la ciudad, Manchester City. En La Liga, Barcelona cae sorpresivamente 2-1 ante la Real Sociedad en un partido marcado por oooootra controversia arbitral de Gil Manzano y VAR. En la Champions League, Real Madrid aplastó al Monaco y el City de Pep Guardiola volvió a caer, en esta ocasión en Noruega ante el PODEROSÍSIMO Bodø/Glimt. Únete a nuestro Discord pa' que cocotees con La PaLtía Fan Club escribiéndonos a nuestro DM en Instagram.No olvides darle like a La PaLtía Podcast en Facebook e Instagram y también dale subscribe y campanita a nuestro canal en Youtube para que no te pierdas tu podcast favorito de fútbol, LA PALTÍA PODCAST.

Geek Forever's Podcast
ขายดีแต่เจ๊ง! ทำไม Neta ขายรถได้เป็นแสนคัน แต่ขาดทุนยับเยิน | Geek Talk EP186

Geek Forever's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2026 20:16


ผมเชื่อว่าถ้าใครใช้ชีวิตอยู่ในกรุงเทพฯ หรือตามหัวเมืองใหญ่ ๆ ในไทย ช่วงปีสองปีที่ผ่านมา เราแทบจะมองไม่เห็นไม่ได้เลยครับ เพราะหันไปทางไหนก็เจอ หันไปทางไหนก็เห็นโลโก้ทรงหยดน้ำนี้วิ่งกันขวักไขว่ ใช่ครับ ผมกำลังพูดถึง Neta Auto สิ่งที่น่าตกใจคือ ภาพที่เราเห็นบนท้องถนน กับความเป็นจริงทางธุรกิจของบริษัทแม่ที่ประเทศจีน มันกลับกลายเป็นหนังคนละม้วน เรื่องราวนี้มันไม่ได้เป็นเพียงแค่การขาดทุนธรรมดา แต่มันคือโศกนาฏกรรมทางธุรกิจระดับ “ยูนิคอร์น” ที่พังทลายลงอย่างรวดเร็ว ชนิดที่ว่าจากดาวรุ่งพุ่งแรง กลายเป็นดาวร่วงที่ล้มละลายในชั่วพริบตา ทำไมแบรนด์ที่ขายดีถล่มทลาย ขายได้เป็นแสน ๆ คัน ถึงเดินมาสู่จุดจบแบบนี้ได้ วันนี้เราจะมาถอดบทเรียนแบบเจาะลึก ผ่านโครงสร้างการเล่าเรื่องสามองค์ ที่จะทำให้เราเข้าใจวงจรชีวิตของ Neta ตั้งแต่จุดเริ่มต้น ไปจนถึงจุดสิ้นสุดครับ เลือกฟังกันได้เลยนะครับ อย่าลืมกด Follow ติดตาม PodCast ช่อง Geek Forever's Podcast ของผมกันด้วยนะครับ #NetaAuto #NetaV #รถยนต์ไฟฟ้า #EV #รถEV #ธุรกิจ #วิเคราะห์ธุรกิจ #รถจีน #ข่าวรถยนต์ #การตลาด #GeekForeverPodcast #ดดลBlog #CaseStudy #รถยนต์ไฟฟ้าจีน #เทคโนโลยี #geektalk #geekforeverpodcast

Fluent Fiction - Hebrew
Finding Art and Flavor: A Holiday Connection in Tel Aviv's Market

Fluent Fiction - Hebrew

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2026 13:19 Transcription Available


Fluent Fiction - Hebrew: Finding Art and Flavor: A Holiday Connection in Tel Aviv's Market Find the full episode transcript, vocabulary words, and more:fluentfiction.com/he/episode/2026-01-01-23-34-02-he Story Transcript:He: השוק הפשפש בתל אביב מלא חיים.En: The Shuk HaPishpesh in Tel Aviv is full of life.He: ריח התבלינים והלחם הטרי ממלא את האוויר.En: The scent of spices and fresh bread fills the air.He: ריחות של שמן זית וזעתר מתערבבים עם קולות הסוחרים והקונים.En: Aromas of olive oil and za'atar blend with the sounds of merchants and shoppers.He: חג החנוכה הגיע, והאווירה חגיגית ומחממת בלב.En: The holiday of Hanukkah has arrived, and the atmosphere is festive and heartwarming.He: יונתן, אמן צעיר, מנסה למצוא השראה לפרויקט חדש שלו.En: Yonatan, a young artist, is trying to find inspiration for his new project.He: הוא מרגיש תקוע וחושש שלא יצליח להגיע למטרות שלו.En: He feels stuck and fears he won't achieve his goals.He: מצד שני, נטע, בלוגרית אוכל נועזת, מחפשת טעמים וסיפורים חדשים לבלוג שלה.En: On the other hand, Neta, a daring food blogger, is searching for new flavors and stories for her blog.He: היא חוששת לאבד את הפופולריות שלה ברשת.En: She fears losing her popularity online.He: שניהם מתהלכים בשוק בקצב מהיר, עיניהם סורקות בין הדוכנים.En: Both move through the market at a fast pace, their eyes scanning between the stalls.He: בדיוק כשהם מתקרבים לדוכן העמוס ברימונים אדומים ובקבוקי שמן נדירים, ידיהם נפגשות על אותו בקבוק שמן זית נדיר.En: Just as they approach a stall packed with red pomegranates and rare oil bottles, their hands meet on the same rare olive oil bottle.He: המפגש המפתיע מעלה חיוך על פניהם.En: The unexpected encounter brings a smile to their faces.He: "סליחה," אומר יונתן בחיוך מהוסס.En: "Sorry," says Yonatan with a hesitant smile.He: נטע מחייכת בחזרה, "אין בעיה, זה נראה כמו שמן מיוחד, נכון?"En: Neta smiles back, "No problem, it looks like a special oil, right?"He: הם מחליטים לשתף פעולה; השמן הזה כל כך נדיר, אולי תוכנית משותפת תעזור.En: They decide to collaborate; the oil is so rare that a joint project might help.He: יונתן חושב על צורות חדשות לציוריו, ונטע כבר מדמיינת את הכתבה הבאה.En: Yonatan thinks of new forms for his paintings, and Neta is already imagining her next article.He: "אפשר לשלב את האמנות שלך בסיפור שלי," מציעה נטע בהתלהבות.En: "We can integrate your art into my story," suggests Neta enthusiastically.He: ביחד, הם מסתובבים בשוק, אוספים רעיונות ותבלינים נוספים.En: Together, they wander through the market, collecting ideas and additional spices.He: השיחות ביניהם זורמות, ואט אט הם מגלים כמה הם משלימים זה את זו.En: The conversations between them flow, and gradually they discover how well they complement each other.He: יונתן מוצא את ההשראה שחיפש כל כך, ונטע זוכה לסיפור מרתק עם ייחודיות שלא ציפתה לה.En: Yonatan finds the inspiration he was searching for so desperately, and Neta gains a captivating story with uniqueness she hadn't expected.He: עם סיום היום, החיוכים שהם מחליפים אינם רק של עבודה מוצלחת.En: By the end of the day, the smiles they exchange are not just from a successful collaboration.He: הם מבינים שהיצירתיות המשותפת ביניהם הביאה משהו מיוחד, חיבור אישי שלא יכול היה לקרות לבד.En: They realize that the shared creativity between them brought something special, a personal connection that could not have happened alone.He: יונתן לומד שערך השיתוף הוא עצום, ונטע מבינה שהכנות והקשרים האישיים חשובים מהכול.En: Yonatan learns that the value of sharing is immense, and Neta understands that honesty and personal connections are most important of all.He: השוק הפשפש נהיה לא רק מקום של קניות, אלא מקום להתחבר וליצור יחד.En: The Shuk HaPishpesh becomes not just a place to shop, but a place to connect and create together. Vocabulary Words:merchant: סוחרshoppers: קוניםfestive: חגיגיתinspiration: השראהachieve: להגיעgoals: מטרותdaring: נועזתflavors: טעמיםpopularity: פופולריותpaces: קצבapproach: מתקרביםencounter: מפגשhesitant: מהוססcollaborate: לשתף פעולהintegrate: לשלבenthusiastically: בהתלהבותwander: מסתובביםcollecting: אוספיםcomplement: משלימיםdesperately: כל כךcaptivating: מרתקuniqueness: ייחודיותimmense: עצוםpersonal: אישייםconnection: חיבורcreate: ליצורexplores: סורקותjoint: משותפתproject: פרויקטimagine: מדמיינתBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/fluent-fiction-hebrew--5818690/support.

The Delicious Legacy
Where Beer Began: Is the Mesopotamian Origin Story Correct & The Birth of Brewing

The Delicious Legacy

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2025 49:49


Hello my curious archeaogastronomers!Who were the first beer makers? Why did they even made beer in the first place? Can we even find a Civilization to be the clear winner in this "race"? What's the word for beer in ancient Sumerian?What role the priests and kings plaid in this? Who even drunk beer in the ancient Mesopotamian world? All this and many more questions were buzzing through my mind.On today's episode I have as a guest the author of the book In The Land of Ninkasi: A History of Beer in Ancient Mesopotamia, Tate Paulette.Tate's book has recently won two awards:Felicia A. Holton Book Award, Archaeological Institute of AmericaThis award is given annually to a writer or writers who, through a major work of non-fiction, represents the importance and excitement of archaeology to the general public. The work should have broad public appeal and be written for an adult lay audience in a clear and engaging style. It should convey the excitement of archaeological discovery accurately and responsibly. It should be well-researched and provide new insight for the general public. https://www.archaeological.org/2026-aia-awards-spotlight-felicia-a-holton-book-award/And he also won the Nancy Lapp Popular Book Award, American Society of Overseas Research:This award is presented to the author/editor of a book published in the last two years that offers a new synthesis of archaeological or textual evidence from the Ancient Near East and Eastern Mediterranean intended to reach an audience of scholars as well as students and the broader public.https://www.asor.org/about-asor/honors-awards/previous-award-recipients/Alright! Time for my delightful and interesting I hope recommendations for this week are the following:Disco scallops:Here's a link:https://www.discoscallops.co.uk/A Spirit Never to Betray” before tequila and mescal there was another: David Lauer investigates the fate of a spiky ancient desert plant called sotol, and its alliance with generations of artisans who distil a fiery spirit from its heart.https://dark-mountain.net/a-spirit-never-to-betray/And finally the website https://www.ukrainer.netA community and organisation that has been researching Ukraine and the Ukrainian context since 2016, telling stories to Ukrainian audiences and broadcasting them to the world in dozens of languages.xEnjoy!Photo credits : Book Tate Paulette, Cuneiform Tablets Justin Kase Conder, Portrait Kathryn GrossmanThom & The Delicious LegacySupport the podcast on Ko-Fi and Patreon for ad-free episodes! https://ko-fi.com/thedeliciouslegacypodcasthttps://www.patreon.com/c/thedeliciouslegacySupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-delicious-legacy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

El Atole
¡LOS NOVI@S PASARON DE MODA! LLEGÓ LA NAVIDAD ATOLINA

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2025 20:03


Esta semana en el atole podcast, un producto de Azteca Noticias para FIA Podcast, recibimos la Navidad con el análisis del artículo “Por qué ya no está de moda tener novio”. ¿Neta ya no queremos la vida en pareja? Escucha el episodio.

Igreja Presbiteriana Moriah
A graça que nasceu no Improvável

Igreja Presbiteriana Moriah

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2025 51:51


O Natal nos conta uma história de um Deus que revela sua graça e misericórdia em detalhes, que muitas vezes passam despercebidos. Neta mensagem Jesus vai chamar sua atenção para a Glória apresentada no Improvável. Pregação do Rev. David Horta na Igreja Presbiteriana Moriah em Americana SP no dia 21/12/25.

El Atole
ENCHÚLAME LA RUTA… EL RETO DE LA MOVILIDAD EN MÉXICO

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2025 15:03


Esta semana en el Atole, una producción de FIA Podcast, hablamos sobre el estado de la movilidad en México: calles, transporte, ciclovías. ¿Neta no podemos tener un transporte de calidad? Escucha el episodio.

El Atole
7 AÑOS DE GOBIERNO MORENISTA… ¿NETA VAN A CELEBRAR?

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2025 19:26


Esta semana en el Atole Podcast, una producción de FIA Podcast, hicimos un análisis de los 7 años de gobierno de Morena. ¿Neta estamos para celebrar? Escucha el episodio.

El Atole
MOVILIDAD, CAMPO Y LA REBELIÓN DE LOS TRANSPORTISTAS

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2025 23:37


Esta semana en el Atole Podcast, una producción de FIA Podcast, hablamos sobre el estado de las carreteras y las protestas de campesinos y transportistas en la Ciudad de México. ¿Neta ellos son los culpables? Escuchen el episodio.

Cross Word
Angelica Schuyler, Truly Revolutionary

Cross Word

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2025 40:26 Transcription Available


Send us a textFind out more about Cross Word Books athttps://www.bookclues.com/Professor Beer's website https://mollybeer.netA woman without a rank helped a country find its balance. We sit down with Professor Molly Beer to explore Angelica Schuyler—born Engeltia into Dutch New York, educated at a royal governor's table, and fluent in the quiet arts that hold a republic together. Her new book, Angelica: For Love and Country in Time of Revolution, uncovers a life lived at the center of events we think we know: Saratoga and Yorktown, the emergence of parties, and the uneasy peace that follows victory.Across these pages and letters, we follow Angelica from Albany's river-crossroads to London drawing rooms and the salons of Paris. She befriends Hamilton and Jefferson at once, attends Burgoyne's Cambridge gatherings after Saratoga to enact peace in public, and navigates a marriage that gave her unusual latitude to move, write, and influence. Sixteen years in England offered a crucial vantage on the French Revolution—first the promise, then the terror—which sharpened her warning against faction at home. The themes feel urgent now: amiability as an active civic practice, soft power as statecraft, and the daily work of keeping rivals talking.We also face the contradictions. Raised in a northern household that practiced domestic slavery, Angelica's views evolved under French antislavery currents and through ties to figures like Pierre Toussaint. The record doesn't flatter or flatten her; it traces change over time, showing how ideals and habits collide. Molly's research—letters preserved by Jefferson, Hamilton, Lafayette, and the Schuyler family; archives across the Atlantic; houses that still stand—lets the story read with the pulse of a novel while staying anchored in evidence.If you're drawn to Revolutionary history, women's leadership, and the subtle forces that shape public life, this conversation reframes the founding through a different lens. Listen to learn how a gifted hostess became a strategic peacemaker, how letters steered alliances, and why the most underrated builders of the United States may be the ones who put down the pistol case and set a longer table. Enjoyed this conversation? Follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review to help others discover it.

The Good Life EDU Podcast
Balancing Literacy and AI: A Radical Centrist's Take with Short Answer Co-Founder Adam Spark

The Good Life EDU Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2025 25:36


In this episode of The Good Life EDU Podcast, welcomes Adam Spark, Nebraska native and co-founder of Short Answer, to discuss his journey from teaching at Louisville and Milford Public Schools to studying learning design and technology at Stanford University, where his idea for Short Answer was born. Adam shares how formative assessment research—particularly from Dr. Dylan Wiliam's Embedded Formative Assessment—inspired the creation of Short Answer, a digital platform designed to make peer feedback, writing practice, and student engagement more meaningful and fun. The two explore: The Nebraska roots that shaped Adam's journey—from the ESU 6 EdTech Leadership Cadre led by Dr. Lynn Herr to presenting at NETA. How Short Answer uses peer feedback, gamification, and comparative judgment to build literacy and critical thinking across all subjects. The role of AI in education, including both its risks and opportunities for literacy, writing, and teacher workload. Adam's concept of being a “radical centrist” on AI—recognizing both the benefits of AI efficiency and the challenges it poses to authentic literacy development. New features in Short Answer like “Pen Pals,” which use AI characters to help students debate and reflect on their writing. Practical AI policy, communication, and enforcement strategies for educators—featuring resources like: AI Trust You (from Laguna Beach USD) Brisk Teaching for revision-tracking in Google Docs SchoolAI for safe, monitored AI interactions The Red-Yellow-Green AI Policy Framework by Australian educator Adrian Cotterall The Washington OSPI AI Guidance Matrix, inspired by the work of Leon Furze and Mike Perkins Adam also shares his balanced take on how educators can help students develop AI literacy, writing fluency, and critical analysis skills—ensuring that technology amplifies learning rather than replacing it.

El Atole
GAME OVER: SE APROBÓ LA NUEVA LEY DE INGRESOS

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2025 19:57


Esta semana en El Atole Podcast, una producción de FIA Podcast, hablamos sobre la aprobación de la Ley de Ingresos que incluye impuestos absurdos como el 8% a los videojuegos. ¿Neta vamos a pagar más por eso? Escucha el episodio.

Pura Cultura Podcast
Ep. 293 - La Pura Neta

Pura Cultura Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2025 121:34


From Sober October to other Life Struggles. 

The Castle Report
Day of Rejoicing

The Castle Report

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2025 11:55


Darrell talks about the peace agreement or ceasefire orchestrated by President Trump to end the slaughter in Gaza and return the hostages to their families. Transcription / Notes DAY OF REJOICING Hello, this is Darrell Castle with today's Castle Report. This is Friday the 17th day of October in the year of our Lord 2025. I will be talking about the peace agreement or ceasefire if you prefer, orchestrated by President Trump to end the slaughter in Gaza and return the hostages to their families. Yes, it was a glorious day anticipated for two years and on the day they arrived 65,000 people gathered in Hostage Square to welcome them home. Many did not survive but for those who did it was indeed an emotional and glorious day. Imagine the joy of seeing your loved one who survived two years of captivity underground in the tunnels of Gaza. For two years you didn't know whether he was alive or dead and what suffering he might be enduring. The peace might not hold and it might be just a temporary pause in the slaughter but the hostages are home and for that moment it was glorious. Everybody around the world celebrated and called Donald Trump a hero. When Trump spoke to the Knesset, the Israeli Parliament, one of the speakers referred to him as a giant of Jewish history. Everybody celebrated except of course the ceasefire protestors in America. It seems that what they had been screaming about for two years was somehow not enough. I suspect that they see their only policy which is, Trump is bad, slipping away. If they had no policy at all that would be good because the more policies your politicians have the poorer you are. No policy is usually the best policy.  Can't you just let yourself be happy for one moment because these hostages are free. For more that 730 days since October 7, 2023, when Hamas kidnapped about 250 people from Israel, they endured a terrible ordeal, and finally about 20 of them were released. In total, 120 made it home alive and 130 did not survive the ordeal. The scene of their return reminded me of the films about when the survivors of the Holocaust stepped off the trains and entered freedom. These dates the dates of the start of the war and the end, carry significance in the Jewish calendar but I don't pretend to understand it, and I wonder if Hamas understands it. For the hostages after years of captivity, starvation, physical abuse, and torture, hidden away in oxygen deprived tunnels their conditions reminiscent of those described by the Psalmist in Psalm 107: 10-14.  “Some sat in darkness, in utter darkness, prisoners suffering in iron chains, because they rebelled against God's commands and despised the plans of the Most High. So, he subjected them to bitter labor; they stumbled and there was no one to help. Then they cried to the Lord in their trouble, and he saved them from their distress. He brought them out of darkness, the utter darkness, and he broke away their chains.” So, there is or was peace if only for a moment but it was a sweet smell at last. How did it happen when so many had tried but no one had succeeded at this level. I can see several differences between Trump's approach and all the others, but let's let Victor Davis Hanson speak about it for a moment. I'm paraphrasing him but for one thing, Trump approaches negotiations from a position of strength rather than weakness. Remember the one hostage who said than when Trump was elected they started treating them better. No more spitting on them and forcing them to dig their own graves because they were obviously afraid of him. Trump was very successful in cutting off the money supply to Hamas and the other Iranian proxy terrorist armies. His sanctions on Iranian oil were squeezing the country's ability to make war and supply the proxy armies. His attack on the Iranian nuclear enrichment sites destroyed or at least set back the Iranian efforts at building a nuclear weapon and that took away the threat that Neta...

Positivity Matters
Maital Neta: Positivity in the Brain

Positivity Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2025 49:15


Maital Neta: Positivity Matters to Our Brains!Professor of Psychology at UNLCliftonStrengths: Empathy, Achiever, Responsibility, Relator, Learner  Recorded: 7/23/2025

How do you like it so far?
Neta Kligler-Vilenchik & Ioana Literat - Not Your Parents' Politics

How do you like it so far?

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2025 56:54


Neta Kligler-Vilenchik— Associate Professor of Communication and Journalism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem— and Ioana Literat— Associate Professor of Communication, Media, and Learning Technologies Design at Columbia University— discuss their book, Not Your Parents' Politics: Understanding Young People's Political Expression on Social Media. They create a dialogue around the ways young people engage with politics using social media, noting the differences between platforms and regions. Kligler-Vilenchik and Literat tie this into the 2016 and 2024 election cycles, along with international bureaucratic frictions.Both scholars tell us about their growing research on youth cultures' interactions with politics and how those have shifted over time. They cover how younger people are often involved in politics, whether it be via fandom or other forms of civic imagination. They end by suggesting that these intersections between the younger generations and politics can be optimistically inspiring.  Here are some of the references from this episode, for those who want to dig a little deeper:Academic TextsNot Your Parents' Politics: Understanding Young People's Political Expression on Social Media [Oxford, Amazon]By Any Media Necessary The New Youth Activism [NYU Press, Amazon] Fan activism and the Harry Potter Alliance [TWC]The Image War Moves to TikTok Evidence from the May 2021 Round of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict [Taylor & Francis Online]Dynamics of scale shift: Contentious places and hybrid activism on social media [Sage Journal]People MentionedJoe RoganKamala HarrisDonald TrumpBarrack ObamaHillary ClintonXi JinpingNancy PelosiAlexandra PelosiDavid HoggLillian (Lilly) Boxman-ShabtaiTaylor SwiftKeren Tenenboim- WeinblattTV, Films, and Other MediaCaptain America [IMDB]Harry Potter [IMDB]Donald Trump Speech LipSync [YouTube link]Extra Fun Tidbits + NewsCivic Paths [Website Link]Scratch Online Coding Community [MIT Site link]Fandom Forward [Link]Little Pinks [Article Link]South Korea President Removed From Power [Article Link]Romanian TikTok Election Scandal [BBC Link]Teen Activism Against School Shooting After Parkland [PBS Link]Slacktivisim [Article Link]Henry Jenkins on Emma Gonzale's Jacket and youth activism [Brown Journal of Public Affairs] ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––Share your thoughts via Twitter with Henry, Colin and the How Do You Like It So Far? account! You can also email us at howdoyoulikeitsofarpodcast@gmail.com.Music:“In Time” by Dylan Emmett and “Spaceship” by Lesion X.In Time (Instrumental) by Dylan Emmet https://soundcloud.com/dylanemmetSpaceship by Lesion X https://soundcloud.com/lesionxbeatsCreative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0Free Download / Stream: https://bit.ly/in-time-instrumentalFree Download / Stream: https://bit.ly/lesion-x-spaceshipMusic promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/AzYoVrMLa1Q––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

PRS Global Open Keynotes
“Exploring Non-Breast Tissue Expansion” with Neta Adler MD

PRS Global Open Keynotes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2025 21:25


In this episode of the PRS Global Open Keynotes podcast, Dr. Neta Adler and Dr. Bar Davidov discuss their experience with all aspects of non-breast tissue expansion. How do patient age, expander location and the cause of the defect influence the outcome?  This episode discusses the following PRS Global Open article: “Risk Assessment for Early Complications in Non-breast Tissue Expansion: 9-year Experience With 308 Tissue Expanders” by Bar Davidov, Ayal Hassidim, Shira Bendor, Alexander Margulis and Neta Adler. Read it for free on PRSGlobalOpen.com: https://journals.lww.com/prsgo/fulltext/2025/05000/risk_assessment_for_early_complications_in.60.aspx Dr. Neta Adler is a plastic surgeon at the Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Centre in Jerusalem, Israel. Dr. Bar Davidov is a senior surgical resident at the Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Centre in Jerusalem, Israel. Your host, Dr. Damian Marucci, is a board-certified plastic surgeon and Associate Professor of Plastic Surgery at the University of Sydney in Australia. #PRSGlobalOpen; #KeynotesPodcast; #PlasticSurgery; Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery- Global Open The views expressed by hosts and guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect the official policies or positions of ASPS.

Be It Till You See It
569. Empathy Is Important to Be a Great Teacher

Be It Till You See It

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2025 43:09 Transcription Available


From redefining “good” and “bad” habits to learning how empathy shapes teaching, Lesley and Brad recap their conversation with yoga teacher Anthony Benenati—founder of City Yoga, California's first Anusara studio, and now leads That's Not Yoga®. With over three decades of experience, Anthony has built a philosophy of meeting students where they are. Together they explore how ego, anger, and even curiosity can open the door to practice, and why the stories we carry and the language we use hold the power to shape growth. This episode invites you to pause, reflect, and ask: is this serving me?If you have any questions about this episode or want to get some of the resources we mentioned, head over to LesleyLogan.co/podcast https://lesleylogan.co/podcast/. If you have any comments or questions about the Be It pod shoot us a message at beit@lesleylogan.co mailto:beit@lesleylogan.co. And as always, if you're enjoying the show please share it with someone who you think would enjoy it as well. It is your continued support that will help us continue to help others. Thank you so much! Never miss another show by subscribing at LesleyLogan.co/subscribe https://lesleylogan.co/podcast/#follow-subscribe-free.In this episode you will learn about:How Anthony's teaching shaped his philosophy of fitting yoga to the students.Brad's early yoga mishaps and how they reframed his view of the practice.Feeling like an "outsider" in Pilates and how sharing built deeper connections.Why empathy is the real skill teachers need in guiding students.Why desire, knowledge, and action are the non-negotiables for growth.Episode References/Links:UK Mullet Tour - https://opc.me/ukP.O.T. Chicago 2025 - https://pilates.com/pilates-on-tour-chicagolandCambodia October 2025 Waitlist - https://crowsnestretreats.comeLevate Program - https://lesleylogan.co/elevateSubmit your wins or questions - https://beitpod.com/questionsAnthony Benenati's Website - https://thatsnotyoga.comGuilt vs. Shame by Brene Brown - https://brenebrown.com/articles/2013/01/15/shame-v-guiltTiny Habits: The Small Changes That Change Everything by BJ Fogg - https://a.co/d/22NIHEI If you enjoyed this episode, make sure and give us a five star rating and leave us a review on iTunes, Podcast Addict, Podchaser or Castbox. https://lovethepodcast.com/BITYSIDEALS! DEALS! DEALS! DEALS! https://onlinepilatesclasses.com/memberships/perks/#equipmentCheck out all our Preferred Vendors & Special Deals from Clair Sparrow, Sensate, Lyfefuel BeeKeeper's Naturals, Sauna Space, HigherDose, AG1 and ToeSox https://onlinepilatesclasses.com/memberships/perks/#equipmentBe in the know with all the workshops at OPC https://workshops.onlinepilatesclasses.com/lp-workshop-waitlistBe It Till You See It Podcast Survey https://pod.lesleylogan.co/be-it-podcasts-surveyBe a part of Lesley's Pilates Mentorship https://lesleylogan.co/elevate/FREE Ditching Busy Webinar https://ditchingbusy.com/ Resources:Watch the Be It Till You See It podcast on YouTube! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq08HES7xLMvVa3Fy5DR8-gLesley Logan website https://lesleylogan.co/Be It Till You See It Podcast https://lesleylogan.co/podcast/Online Pilates Classes by Lesley Logan https://onlinepilatesclasses.com/Online Pilates Classes by Lesley Logan on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjogqXLnfyhS5VlU4rdzlnQProfitable Pilates https://profitablepilates.com/about/Follow Us on Social Media:Instagram https://www.instagram.com/lesley.logan/The Be It Till You See It Podcast YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq08HES7xLMvVa3Fy5DR8-gFacebook https://www.facebook.com/llogan.pilatesLinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/lesley-logan/The OPC YouTube Channel https://www.youtube.com/@OnlinePilatesClasses Episode Transcript:Lesley Logan 0:00  There's a difference between saying something is bad and to lead to I'm bad, and asking yourself, is it serving me? If the answer is yes, fuck what people think. If it's a yes, and tomorrow it's a yes, and then the next week it's a yes, and then next month it's a no, then you make a change. Lesley Logan 0:22  Welcome to the Be It Till You See It podcast where we talk about taking messy action, knowing that perfect is boring. I'm Lesley Logan, Pilates instructor and fitness business coach. I've trained thousands of people around the world and the number one thing I see stopping people from achieving anything is self-doubt. My friends, action brings clarity and it's the antidote to fear. Each week, my guest will bring bold, executable, intrinsic and targeted steps that you can use to put yourself first and Be It Till You See It. It's a practice, not a perfect. Let's get started.Lesley Logan 1:05  Welcome back to the Be It Till You See It interview recap where my co-host in life, Brad, and I are going to dig into the authentic convo I had with Anthony Benenati in our last episode. If you haven't yet listened to that one, you've missed out. Brad Crowell 1:16  You definitely missed out. Lesley Logan 1:18  I don't like to go around saying you made mistakes, but you did.Brad Crowell 1:20  You did. Lesley Logan 1:24  You don't suck or anything, but, all right, before I get into that, today is August 28th 2025 and it is National Rainbow Bridge Remembrance Day. And on this day, of course, it's gonna say Rainbow Bridge twice. So the death of a beloved pet, whether it's the family dog, a furry kitty, or something a little more obscure, is a sad occasion. Rainbow Bridge Remembrance Day on August 28th is the day that we remember the pets that are no longer with us. Whilst the pain of losing a pet, you can't laugh while we're talking about dead dogs, babe, but we are laughing because Rainbow Bridge Remembrance Day is a day we remember our pets. We got that from remembrance, you know, like we got it, okay, anyways. Whilst the pain of losing a pet somewhat heals over time, they're never forgotten, and today is their day. The day was founded by author Deborah Barnes as a way for people to share their memories of the pets that they have lost, whether it's a dog, a hamster or a snake, or, you know, anything in between. Oh, maybe this is the day that we maybe actually like say it. Brad Crowell 2:32  That's what I was thinking. Lesley Logan 2:34  Okay, well, do you want to say it?Brad Crowell 2:36  Yeah, I do. Also, I think it's great that it's in the month of August. Lesley Logan 2:40  I know it's like we knew. Brad Crowell 2:42  If you didn't know, Lesley and I have only one dog now, and it's been a couple of months that we lost August as well. And when I say as well, what I mean is last year, we lost Gaia towards the end of the year, and then about six months later, we also lost August, and that was really, really challenging, and not something that we talk about very often.Lesley Logan 3:08  I know well, because there's a difference, and I think that's what was important about this day. And like, if you needed this day, it's like, there's something it was something easier. I mean, it felt really hard at the time when we had to, like, make a day to say goodbye to Gaia, you know, like we, we knew for years the day was coming, and we could see it was time. And we had a different situation with August, where it was just like, oh. Brad Crowell 3:33  It was unexpected. It was sudden. Lesley Logan 3:35  This is happening to this is happening today, and that's, that, like, that's just not enough time for your brain to like, not that we miss him differently, but we, I do, like, it's just a different grief. It felt like a different grief. Brad Crowell 3:48  It felt like a different grief. I felt like with Gaia, I had a lot more opportunity to say goodbye ahead of time, you know. And then when when it was gone, it was fond memories. With August, it felt like shock and sadness.Lesley Logan 4:11  Yeah, yeah. I mean, with and with her, like, I felt like, okay, she's gonna be better. Because, like, she was just having a hard time being alive. And he was so young, so that just felt like it was it was hard, it was awful. We didn't talk about it, because there's when you when you share, that someone passes away, or a pet passes away, there's an outpouring of love because of this world we live in. Like, you can say what you want about the negative sides of social media. But the positive sides are like, insane. It's like, it's like the people from your life 10 years ago, and because people have had pets like, they feel it. When you lose a pet and you see someone like you feel that loss with them. Because you know what it feels like and like, in no way were we capable of handling any I'm sorry, like I couldn't and, like, even now we're getting teary eyed. So anyways, we have one amazing dog, and we, if you know this about OPC, well, all of our companies do a little donation to a charity. It's built into all of our products and our profit margins and OPC, this year, I chose a dog charity down because they get like, 500 animals, like, a week, and like, they're trying really hard to be a no kill shelter, and I, and we can't I, like, literally, look at dogs Brad, like, look at this one. Like, we're gonna, like, we're gonna take this on. And as much as, like, oh, that fills this hole. Then I'm, like, it doesn't fill the hole. So, like, anyways, National Rainbow Bridge Remembrance Day to for from our hearts to all of yours who've lost a pet, it's so hard. So anyways, okay, so in other news. Brad Crowell 5:51  In other news.Lesley Logan 5:52  We are back from our tour, as you heard last time, but we are literally leaving in like four days to go to the U.K., and we opened up ala carte workshops, which means that if you can't take a whole day off with us, it's quite possible there is a spot left in a workshop. So we just took the day passes and allowed people to buy a workshop. So there might be one or two workshops that you can snag your spot. And so go to opc.me/uk because we're going to be in Essex and Leeds, and I don't know when we'll be back teaching in the U.K., but I know we're gonna be there now, and it's gonna be so much fun. There's some great workshops. There's some business ones, there's some Pilates ones. They're for people who like us and love us and just wanna learn with us who are really, absolutely amazing. So thank you to our hosts from The Movement Base and Chapel Allerton Pilates. Then we come back and like, two weeks later, we leave for Chicagoland. We're going to be at a Balanced Body's POT and I'm teaching the Joe's gyms there. Brad is going to have, like, Brad just now was helping me with the booth, and that's it's in Burr Ridge, but they call it Chicagoland, and I like that. And from Chicagoland, we're going to go to Cambodia. And you know what? We've had people last minute join us, like we said, you could join like, two weeks before. So, crowsnestretreats.com, if you are feeling ambitious and wanting to get the heck out of town because there's a lot going on and maybe you just want to take a break. So, crowsnestretreats.com. And then what? Brad Crowell 7:16  Well, we're actually working on lighting up a workshop and some classes in Singapore right now. Lesley Logan 7:21  I know. Brad Crowell 7:22  Which would be awesome. We'll see. You know, I would say at this point, if it hasn't come together, then we have a problem. If you're listening to this now, but right now we're working on it when we're recording this. So we're gonna say, yeah, it happened. It definitely happened. We got a workshop coming in Singapore.Lesley Logan 7:39  It's going to happen because, hello. I mean, it's not very often Singapore that I have a layover during daylight hours. Brad Crowell 7:44  That's right. Lesley Logan 7:44  And so we're gonna make there's people who want it.Brad Crowell 7:46  It's gonna be awesome, yeah. But anyway, we've been looking at different venues right now, and we're lining it all up. So yeah. And then after we get back from Singapore, we actually are home for about a month, which is quite nice to to chill out. We some family coming into town, and then we go on our winter tour for OPC, where we're driving another 8000 miles this year. Last year, we did 8200 over the winter. This year is going to be less miles more stops. Oh, yeah. Lesley Logan 8:20  Okay. Brad Crowell 8:21  Less miles, more steps, but it's gonna be awesome. We are stoked. Lesley Logan 8:24  You know what's really funny, guys? Okay, so the team, like, I see the map, I see where we're going, I give some inputs on some places. I'm like, yeah, I'll do that, whatever. But then they don't actually always tell me, like, all the events we're doing. So like, this week, all the private events that, because, like, studios that host us can also, like, hire us for an event, just for their team, right? So there's a public class and a public workshop, and then sometimes there's a private workshop. And apparently there's a lot more than workshops that I thought on the summer tour. So I am interested to see this winter tour. I expect lots of gifts and lots of hugs, but we'll announce the winter tour in October. So if you are in Cambodia with us, you'll hear it all announced. Brad Crowell 9:03  Yes, you will. Lesley Logan 9:04  Okay before we get into Anthony's incredible episode. What is the question of the week?Brad Crowell 9:10  Yes, great. So I don't actually know how to say this, netamenashe, yeah, netamenashe. there you go, on Instagram, she asked, Hey Lesley, do you do any Zoom sessions sometimes? Lesley Logan 9:27  Sometimes I do. Brad Crowell 9:28  Sometimes.Lesley Logan 9:29  That's true. Yeah. Who gets them? It's gonna sound like I'm an asshole, but the people who get Zoom sessions with me are people who are in my mentorship program, to be completely honest. I don't have a lot of hours in a week that I can teach because of we run OPC, you run Profitable Pilates, you know, and we do have the mentorship program, so the limited times that I have are for those in that program. And then sometimes OPC members get access to that calendar. But basically, as you can hear, no one publicly gets access to those things. So as much as I love to teach the world on Zoom, that the way I can do that is through OPC actually, because we have a monthly live class, and I can look, we can hang out afterwards, and I can look at your form. I can answer your questions. You don't even have to come to the live class when I look at your form, you can submit videos, and I can give you feedback. So if you're wanting me to give you feedback on some exercises, be an OPC member. If you're a teacher, you can go through eLevate we only have a few spots there, where OPC, it's obviously as many people. Brad Crowell 10:28  Open to the world. Lesley Logan 10:28  Open to the world and. Lesley Logan 10:29  But yeah, I mean, with eLevate, if you, if you're actually looking for a specific feedback on your practice and you want to really grow, Neta, you should be considering eLevate. It's for teachers. It's a nine-month program. It's like, consider it like going and getting a master's degree somewhere. It's very in depth, in in in what it covers. It's going to run through everything that Lesley learned from Jay Grimes, who studied with Joe. So you're going to be covering 500 exercises. It's going to be amazing. During that time, your your personal practice will significantly grow, and you'll also have, Lesley will be, you know, watching your practice during those nine months, too. So that's like, the best way to make that happen. Just reach out, or go to lesleylogan.co/elevate and or you can book a call. I'm super happy to hop on a call and just say, what's up, you know.Lesley Logan 11:21  I mean, I it's like a it's a great problem to have. And I actually used to teach this long I've been teaching online. I used to teach on Skype, and I used to teach people all over on Skype. Brad Crowell 11:30  2015, '16, '17 Skype.Lesley Logan 11:33  Yeah, Skype, oh, my God. Or sometimes Facebook, sometimes Facebook Messenger, because Skype wasn't working, or whatever, like, it was so, but I was, like, anything that has a video I can teach on it. And, you know, but, yeah, I think, like, we do have some great opportunities to work together in person between the tours and Cambodia, and then the online stuff is, you know, you I all love. Brad Crowell 11:56  That's another great one. You could come with us to Cambodia, Neta, where you'll be doing five classes with Lesley during the retreat. And obviously, you know, it's, it's not a large group. So you can come there and be in person. Lesley Logan 12:10  Yeah. So you guys send in your questions. You can, like, you'll literally hear honest feedback and answers. And we love answering them. Like, I just, I want, I want, I want I want questions about your wedding, I don't know. Like, give me some good ones. Go to beitpod.com/questions to submit them, or text us at 310-905-5534, it doesn't yet mean Be It Pod, but we're getting to.Brad Crowell 12:34  No it's not gonna mean Be It Pod anytime soon. So I love that your wishful thinking here it's, you know, low on the list.Lesley Logan 12:41  Being it till I see it. Brad Crowell 12:43  Lower on the priority list. Lesley Logan 12:47  All right, all right. Brad Crowell 12:49  Love you. Lesley Logan 12:49  Love you too.Brad Crowell 12:51  Stick around. We'll be right back. We're gonna dig into one of my really dear friends who I've now known for more than a decade, and he he's just inspirational in multiple ways, being a yogi, but also, you know, he's a philosopher too. So cannot wait to dig into this convbo that you have with Anthony Benenati. You're really going to enjoy. If you haven't already gone back and listened to that, you should, but yeah, looking forward to it. Stick around we'll be right back. Brad Crowell 13:19  Right. Let's talk about Mr. Anthony Benenati. A professional yoga teacher with over 32 years of experience. Before stepping into yoga, Anthony served in the Air Force and worked in a comp as a competitive power lifter. I don't know if he worked at it, but he was a competitive power lifter, which left him with shoulder and knee injuries. In fact, you know, he he told me when he was younger, he couldn't even touch his toes, you know, and today he's like, you know, obviously been doing yoga for three decades. He founded City Yoga, which was California's first on a Sora studio, and he now leads, That's Not Yoga. That's his website, thatsnotyoga.com. He he's actually also done a lot of business stuff, and like because he sold studios and then he taught for other people, and he's done workshops and holds retreats, all sorts of stuff. Anthony's philosophy is to fit yoga to the student, making sure the practice leads to transformation and healing, not to suffering. And he teaches students to listen to their bodies every day, meeting themselves where they're at, with their openness and compassion, and yeah I think that is a really great summary of, you know, who he is. But I would also say he rides a motorcycle, he drinks beer, he curses. He's fucking cool and hip, and that's one of the things that that I connected with him the most about is because I had this preconception of what's a yogi. Lesley Logan 14:45  I mean, your first class was, like a per tip, like a bit like, like the typical yoga instructor, like this little, soft spoken older lady.Brad Crowell 14:52  No, no, no, no, no. I had my well, so that, so that was the first teacher that I actually learned from, and she was super sweet and nice. But yes, the class was literally for, like, elderly people. And I was like, teach me the foundations. And I liked the class because she let her students ask questions during class. And I was like, I don't understand this pose. How does it work? And it effectively was like. Lesley Logan 15:14  In case you haven't noticed, Brad, you guys, Brad literally interrupts all classes to ask questions. Like, like, all classes, he has questions. He comes on the retreat, and he'll just pop into a class, and then he's got a question. It's like, we actually talked about that yesterday, and you missed class. But okay.Brad Crowell 15:29  So, but my very first class was hilarious, because I'm like, you know, my nickname in yoga class was shark boy, or Mr. Bendy, and I, I've just been I'm a hyper mobile body, so naturally flexible. And I get to my first yoga class ever was a Groupon that I bought, and I showed up for class, and I'm in the middle of, like, 30 or 40 people, and I don't have a clue what I'm doing. I'm watching this guy up in the front, you know, do all the things. And I was like, okay, we're sticking our arm over there. We're shooting, our leg over this way. We're twisting and blah, blah, blah. And at the end of the class, he came up to me, he's like, wow, man, you have a great practice. And I was like, this is my very first class. And it was like, what? And I was like, yeah. And then I left the studio, and I walked out to my motorcycle, and I could not get onto it. Lesley Logan 16:16  You did way too much. Brad Crowell 16:17  Because I hurt myself so bad that I literally had to sit there for like an hour just for my back to not be screaming at me. And I was like, well, yoga is not for me. And I just was like, I'm done. And then I never, you know, like, I never went back, and I, but I, but I had that Groupon right? And so anyway, somehow I ended up using it. And I bought another package somewhere with Anthony, because the studio was convenient and but I only want. Lesley Logan 16:46  Your first class wasn't with Anthony. Brad Crowell 16:47  No, no, my first class was not with Anthony. But like, a year or two later, I was like, I'm gonna give this another try. And I did buy, like, a 10 pack at Anthony's studio, and I use, like, and he didn't have an expiration on it, right? So, and I, but I only use, like, two classes. And then I didn't know yoga for like, years. And then there was a point where I was like, I need to go. I need to go back to class. And I, I called the studio. Had, he had sold it and, you know, so I, I went. I was like, hey, I had this package with the old studio, you know, you know. And I wasn't even taking with Anthony. I had been taking with that lady, that older lady, lady, but I still had packages. It just so happened to be Anthony's studio. I didn't know that, yeah. So when I went back, Anthony was the teacher, and that's how I first met him. And I was like, who the hell is this guy? He's awesome. This is rad and that and then I was like, hooked. I was in. This is probably like, 2014. So I've been dabbling in yoga for like, maybe three years, but not really.Lesley Logan 17:46  I love how two or three times in two years is dabbling.Brad Crowell 17:50  Yeah. Well, with the with the older with the with the older lady, whose name I don't remember, and I feel bad about that. I probably went, you know, I bought a few 10 packs, you know, I went a few times.Lesley Logan 18:00  Okay, it wasn't clear that there's a multiple 10 pack. Brad Crowell 18:02  Yeah. Sorry, sorry I went a few times, like, I had enough foundation (inaudible). Lesley Logan 18:05  Every time I've heard this story it has always had, like, one 10 pack, and it's like, you get a couple of times it's not dabbling.Brad Crowell 18:12  Oh, I went, I went, yeah, I went enough to, like, decide that yoga wasn't gonna hurt me if I knew what I was doing. But, you know, I didn't actually, like, it didn't turn it into a habit or a practice. I just went a few times, and then, you know, it wasn't until, you know, a year later that I went back to redeem the rest of my package that, studio had sold. I didn't even know it. And I was like, well, they're gonna honor it. I already have classes. I'll just go there. And then I happened to pop into a class that was Anthony's, but, wow, that was a long story that has nothing to do with anything. Lesley Logan 18:45  Speaking of Anthony. Brad Crowell 18:45  Yeah, let's shift on, like from your convo, which was deep. Lesley Logan 18:50  It was deep. I knew it would be, I know it'd be so good, but I think for all the teachers, no matter what you teach, this is a really great thing. Anthony says he believes that the most effective teacher is someone who understands how people get to the practice. Brad Crowell 19:03  Well, you just found out. Lesley Logan 19:05  Yeah, well, but like, right, right, but like, I think this goes to, you know, we coach a lot of Pilates instructors, and they're like, I want to work with an advanced person. All they want to do is lose weight, and it's like, right? And we don't want you to lie to people, but you have to understand what gets people to the practice, so that you can have empathy for them being a beginner, because they should be allowed to be a beginner, and we can't, we don't want them to feel shame for what they think they want in their life, because that's a compilation of years of stories and influence good or bad to, and in the conversation we talked about, there's no such thing as good or bad, but like to to someone. And so how can you really have a lived experience, so that you can in whatever it is you're teaching, so that you can come from a really great place, an honest place, and and be human, you know, like, I think a lot of instructors put themselves upon pedestals, cult leaders and and forget that like you are also in practice when you teach something, that's a practice, right? And so he also said empathy is such an important factor to be a great teacher, you have to put yourself in their shoes. And this is something like, look, of course, I have days where I get tired and I'm like, why don't they just fucking relax and stop trying to be perfect, like I don't understand, like, I'm fucking just, just relax, just be in practice. But also, I know what that is like. I know why they can't do it. I know that they have years of like, being for whatever, like somebody told them that it had maybe the perfection is because it kept the house safe. You know, there's so many different reasons why people seek perfection. They want certainty. They want control, you know.Brad Crowell 20:47  Yeah, I mean, it could be a response from uncertainty in another area of their life, where they feel like this is where I can have certainty, because I know exactly how it's supposed to be, you know. And then, and then it becomes this thing. Lesley Logan 21:00  Yeah, but when I when I like, so when I catch myself, because sometimes, like, I'm like, and it's like, oh, wait, hold on a second. We've like, I've been here. So what, what was I going through? And what actually got me to, like, let go of that and get back in that empathy, because it actually is what helps guide people on the path to being more themselves, to connecting to themselves, to having a personal practice. So it was just like.Brad Crowell 21:25  Yeah. Anthony was talking about his ego was the thing that brought him to the practice. Because he was like. Lesley Logan 21:31  Which would just be the irony of yoga. Brad Crowell 21:33  Yeah. And I'll tell you, it was actually anger that brought me to the practice and. Lesley Logan 21:39  I do went to yoga with you because I thought you're cute. I mean I was going to yoga already, and I was like, Ookay, I'll go to that class with him, because he's cute.Brad Crowell 21:48  bBut, but I was angry that I couldn't do it, and that was also ego. But like, I was angry. I was angry outside. I was angry at my ex, right? And I was angry that I couldn't figure it out. And I was angry that my I was just angry. And then when I when I knew was that, after I had beat the shit out of myself in a yoga class, I felt better. Like, ironically, you know, and like, if you know, talk about controlling, like I wanted every single answer to every every possible understanding of the movement, you know, and then, and then there was stuff that I was like, couldn't do. And it generally like, ironically, I was flexible, but I wasn't flexible enough in my own mind. And I definitely wasn't strong. And, you know, I think that anger, like, pushed me through the strength training barriers of where I was, like, I need to be able to hold this pose for whatever, 10 seconds, I don't know, like, whatever it was like. And it was like, I mean, I'm glad I didn't hurt myself, to be honest, you know, during it. But it was, you know, it took me a solid six months to enjoy the practice, you know, because I was just frustrated at everything.Lesley Logan 23:04  Yeah, I think, like, had you come to it for a different way, you might, like, it would might have been a different thing, but maybe you didn't, wouldn't have practiced that hard. Like, I think, I think that's what the point is. Like, what if we allowed our journey to whatever it is just be that, I think a lot of people want to change the past. They want, they want it to be a different way that they got into something. I remember, like, how I got into Pilates. I thought it was BS, and I remember not telling anyone that story for years, like I was so embarrassed that I actually thought that that Pilates was a gimmick, you know, I really was. I was like, oh. And then also on top of that, because when I became a Pilates instructor, people, most of the teachers were dancers. So here I was one of the few in my world, not in the world, but in my world, L.A., that was a non-dancer, and I thought it was bullshit, you know, like I was just like, I'm just gonna just, I'm just gonna bend back, I'm in the back, and no one's gonna know. But then I realized, like, actually, like, how I got to Pilates is probably how a lot of people think about Pilates. And what if I actually just, like, lean into the empathy of that, and it might actually allow more people to come to the practice, because then they don't feel stupid or silly or weird for thinking it's, it's, you know, not gonna work, you know? And it found, the more I talked about how I wasn't a dancer, the more teachers were like, I'm not one either. And then made them feel good. And so, like, what if we all just own the story that we have? It might actually make us all have more community and connection to different people.Brad Crowell 24:33  Yeah. I mean, it makes you relatable, you know, makes makes as a teacher, it makes you relatable when you're willing to, you know, share the things that it's I think, you know, there's always over-sharing can be wrong. But like, I think it's hard to know what will be received well. And so I feel like that there's fear there, and that's why you know, you're like, man, I shouldn't share that. But then, like, when you know if and when you do, it's like, oh, you know, like, well, I'm not alone in this, and other people are probably also not sharing, and now they feel permission to, you know, commiserate or connect, or, you know, makes them feel better about themselves, too. So, yeah. Lesley Logan 25:12  Yeah. Love it. Okay, what did you love? Brad Crowell 25:13  Yeah, so I loved this idea of good and bad. You know, he said yoga doesn't actually see things as good and bad. It's not like you have a good practice or a bad practice, or you're a good yogi or a bad yogi, you know. He said that yoga kind of sees things more in the does it work, or is it not working? You know? And he was talking about the specifically, like, when, when we were talking about this, it was more talking about habits. You know, it's like, the habit is there, whether it's a quote, unquote, good habit or a bad habit. You know, we're taking that and setting that aside instead. It's a, you know, how is this habit serving me? Is it, is it working for me, or is it not working for me, right? And specifically you were like, maybe you get frustrated that you sit there and scroll on Instagram all day long, but maybe you can see that as a good thing, because you actually need a moment to to just like, not think, right?Lesley Logan 26:12  Yeah, yeah. We also mean, we talked about, like, some people would say it's bad to drink, but like, if it if, if that drink made you that drink made you relax and connect with your family. Like, is it bad and and I think, like, is it wrong? So I've heard that this before, and a couple different things, obviously, like, there are things that cannot be great for you, but you, the difference is, like, is it serving you? Is it serving you? And it's okay for something to serve you and not serve somebody else. Brad Crowell 26:43  Or what is coming from it that could be serving you, right? Like, it might not be the thing that is serving you like, like the alcohol itself might not be beneficial, but the quality time that you spent with family when consuming the alcohol that is worth doing, right, you know? So, there's, I still, I still love the idea that like everything in moderation, including moderation, you know.Lesley Logan 27:08  Well, I think the point is, because I think about Brene Brown, she's gone in my head a couple times in this conversation, guilt versus shame is her thing, right? Like, I think some people shame themselves. I had a drink last night, versus, like, I spent time with my family and I had a drink, and I love spending time with my family. I don't love I had the drink, but when I had the drink, it let me forget about the work that I had so I could spend time with my family. So I do need to figure out a way to get to forget about work so I can spend time my family. But we don't have to have shame around the drink, because, you know, and I think that's where it's like, we have to be kinder to ourselves. I think people just walk around. I mean, it's on the internet, right? People just shame people all the time. That's bad. That's wrong. You did that wrong. Like, no one is going way to go, like, you know, when's the last time you told a stranger (inaudible). Brad Crowell 28:00  We definitely celebrated with OPC. I was gonna, I was gonna circle this right back around to your Pilates practice or your yoga practice, because when I first got into yoga, that was how I treated myself. I'm not good enough. I'm doing it wrong. I'm not doing it well. It's, it's not good, like I'm not a good yogi. And I was judging myself, but I was angry. I was angry at myself. I was angry at the world, you know, and like, you know, but I knew that, like physically, my body, like you ever felt like, you ever felt like so frustrated you just have to go run? You ever felt like that, where like running is somehow going to like be the thing, I and, like, that was that was like, you know, because you get that endorphins release and all that stuff, and that was what I was looking for without really understanding it, I just knew that I felt better after class, you know, and because I was also more relaxed and, like, my mind wasn't like, freaking out all the time, you know, at that point. But it still took time for me to like, took years for me to stop judging my own practice and like the idea that.Lesley Logan 29:14  But I think going back to like, there's a difference between saying something is bad and to lead to I'm bad, and asking yourself, and if we could just catch ourselves now, because this is why I love this conversation. Is it serving me? If the answer is yes, fuck what people think. If it's a yes, and tomorrow it's a yes, and then the next week, it's a yes, and then next month, it's a no. Then you make a change, but. Brad Crowell 29:44  Sure, you can make a choice. Lesley Logan 29:45  But I think some people are using judgment on good or bad, on things that are serving them, and then they're fucking stuck, like if you had not gone to yoga because I'm bad. It makes me feel like, you know, so I'm not, like, yoga would become the thing that's wrong. And then, like, you know what I mean? So like, is it serving me? It's serving me to go because I'm angry, and I can be angry, and it's serving me, and then all of a sudden, the anger at yoga no longer served you, and you let it go. So I think, like, there's a couple different ways to see this. Brad Crowell 30:20  Or the anger at me is no longer serving me. Lesley Logan 30:22  Yeah, so you had to let it go. So I think, what if we could all stop? If you and this is something we can catch ourselves doing here at this household, you and me together, but also, like our coworkers, your friends, like, if you go, oh, I know it's bad that I do this, hit, pull, that rubber band. Is it serving me, that I do this, right? Is it serving me that I do this? And if you can honestly say yes, then let the fucking guilt go, because it's not helping you. Brad Crowell 30:48  You said pull that rubber band? Lesley Logan 30:50  You know, you have a rubber band on your wrist. Brad Crowell 30:52  Yeah, yeah. Snap it. Lesley Logan 30:53  Snap it. Brad Crowell 30:54  Like, hit the reset button. Yeah, you know. And, and it's, you know, that he took it a little bit differently in the conversation, because he's, you know, he was talking about all things serve a purpose, even if we look at it and say that's bad, you know? Because, you know, he said we wouldn't know love without hate, joy without pain. Lesley Logan 31:18  I can think of a few people that I could still think the world's a better place if they weren't in it. I'm just gonna say, we all know, but like, I get the point.Brad Crowell 31:27  Perspective, right? It allows us to actually understand what we have in our world that is amazing, you know, because we can also see, oh, damn, I definitely that is not amazing over there. You know? You know that that's not giving that's not that is not working. That would not work for me, right? I mean, yeah, that wouldn't work for me. So, you know, it's a, he said, it's a balance, you know, and it's and each scenario you find yourself in, you can find that balance between, you know, is it working for me or not working for me? Or is it the good and the bad? You know, how can it be working for you? Lesley Logan 32:04  I mean, you know, I love it because, like BJ Fogg always said, there's no such thing as bad habit. Every habit you have is serving some function. Now, there might be habits you don't like or are no longer serving you, but they're a habit. But there, you cannot say there's a bad habit, because it is providing something in your brain that's kicking off a dopamine otherwise your brain wouldn't seek doing it.Brad Crowell 32:24  Right. Yeah, yeah. I always thought about that too with, like, food, you know, there's something, even if it's like, quote, unquote, bad habit of, like, eating all the time, or, like, maybe you have, like, a consistent, like, I eat late, or whatever, and you know that it's like, not physically helping you. There's still something in your head that's like, I need that thing, whatever that thing is, you know, I need that glass of orange juice, you know, I need the sugar, you know. Lesley Logan 32:49  Well, because it could be, it brings re lief, right? It's distraction, it might calm you down. There's so many different things that our habits do. So if there's something that you feel no longer serves a purpose in your life, right, you have to explore that and not judge that. I'm going to do a whole series on habits, actually, so we can continue this conversation on this like it's now an eight episode series I'm going to do about habits. Brad Crowell 33:19  Really? Lesley Logan 33:19  Oh, Brad has no idea. Brad Crowell 33:20  What? Tell me more. Lesley Logan 33:22  Yeah, oh, my God, I'm doing a whole episode, a whole series on my. Brad Crowell 33:25  On where? Lesley Logan 33:26  On the pod. I'm just taking over and not interviewing people for a few weeks. And I'm gonna tell you how to fucking do a habit. And we're also talking about unraveling habits that no longer serve you. Brad Crowell 33:35  All right, you heard it here first, y'all, surprise. Lesley Logan 33:37  So the thing the homework from this episode is just start taking notice of things, you know, the habits you have, the routines you have that no longer serve you. And we can bring that to the series, which will come out, I think it's going to come out either in December or January, so.Brad Crowell 33:55  Cool. All right, that's really fun. We'll stick around. We'll be right back. We're going to dig into those Be It Action Items that you covered with Anthony, which were also fantastic. So yeah, stick around we'll be right back. Brad Crowell 34:07  Welcome back. Let's dig into those Be It Action Items that you had.Lesley Logan 34:13  You guys, I am notorious, like, I'm notorious, like, yeah, I'm ready. And then I just looked down, and he's like, just wants me to look at the camera when he says welcome back. So I'm sorry, everyone here we are. Welcome back. Brad Crowell 34:24  Welcome back. Lesley Logan 34:24  Say it with him. What bold, ex, you're not gonna say it with me? What bold, executable, intrinsic or targetedBrad Crowell 34:31  Action items can we take away from your convo with Anthony Benenati?Lesley Logan 34:35  Just so you know, I always fade out, even when you sing Happy Birthday, because I can't. I don't like how I sound. Okay. I'm going first, babe, here we go. I'm taking away because I there's just too many things I loved. So he said, he states that it's important that we actually we focus on three things when you want to do things that you want to do. So first of all, to do anything you want to do, you have to actually have the desire to do it. If you don't have the desire to do it, you won't put the effort forward. Has anyone ever said like, oh, I'm gonna I'm gonna learn Spanish, and then you don't learn Spanish. So you have to have the desire to do it. This is, we're gonna talk about this in the Habit Series. I love it. Knowledge. You have to learn to do it. He actually said just doing something without knowing how to do it can cause you harm. This is very true. You have to actually learn how to do it. I'm actually trying to learn how to do tarot, because I like want to, we have a Ttarot episode coming out, and I like, want to understand how to like, do it better. And I want a tarot is a personal relationship with yourself. It's asking yourself questions. And I want to have, I don't want to do it wrong. I want to have a really good understanding of it before I start journaling and pulling cards. And really like doing it for real. And then third is action. Then you simply have to do it. But beyond doing it just once, you must commit to doing over and over and over again to create meaningful change. And I love this so much. We have to be okay with being beginners, are we okay for having, like, being on a journey of learning, and then you just keep doing it. And it's really amazing how when you do that, it's like there's deeper levels of everything that we do, and it's just so good. I am loving, I love this, love, I love this triad. Okay, Brad.Brad Crowell 36:12  Yeah, I think that that idea of desire, knowledge and action is so obvious, but we often will skip one of the steps. Lesley Logan 36:24  Sometimes people skip desire. Brad Crowell 36:26  That's what I'm saying. Lesley Logan 36:27  It's terrible, like, that's a bad one. Brad Crowell 36:28  I'm doing it because I have to, or I'm doing it for somebody else, but really, you don't fucking want to, and so it actually sets you up to fail from the gate, right? Because what's gonna happen, you're gonna you're gonna do it, and it's gonna build frustration or resentment, you know, or like you mentioned with step two, if you skip knowledge, you could hurt yourself. And then, you know, there's step three, which is actually being consistent with it. You can have the desire to learn. You could even learn how to do it. But then if you don't do it.Lesley Logan 37:03  Right, right, because you, because some people won't do things because they're they're too new at it, you know. Okay, your Be It Action Items, your takeaways.Brad Crowell 37:11  Okay, so he was talking about being careful with language, and you mentioned this too, right? How your body actually learns, your body responds to the way that you think and the things that you say impact, you know, like, what you think is what you're going to say, and what you think your body is also going to do. Lesley Logan 37:32  Your body's not going to go rogue on you.Brad Crowell 37:34  Right. So, for example, you were talking about, you know, oh, I'm never, I never lose weight, or I'm never gonna get stronger or, you know, or I was thinking about just this, just the other day, I had somebody come, you know, we had somebody come to our place, and we were just taking photos, and the person said, oh, no, no, no, no, no, that's my bad side. And then shifted to the other side of the photo so they could get it. And I was like, that's like, I mean, of course, we've all heard that and like, it sounds like so Hollywood, but it's also, you know, like, that's a shame.Lesley Logan 38:13  Well, also, because you it just you have confirmation bias. You actually always see the thing that you're saying is bad, but your body listens. If you say you have a weak arm, your body's not gonna go let me show you how strong I am. No, it's just not gonna happen, and you'll treat it that way. So I really, I really think language, being careful with it, is something we could all pay attention to.Brad Crowell 38:34  Yeah and then the other side of it, too is let's say you have the desire and the action, the knowledge, I mean, and you're putting it into action, the way that you put it into action today might be different than the way you put it into action yesterday, right? And I think I had, especially with my yoga practice, never fully embraced this idea, ever. So for 10 years, I was like, I can always go further than I did the day before. That's just the way I always looked at it. It wasn't until I started lifting weights that I truly looked at it like, I just can't today, whatever, whatever, like, like, if last week I did 150 pounds, I just feel like, wimpy today, I'm not going to be able to do it and I and I could actually hurt myself.Lesley Logan 39:28  Yeah, that's why my trainer has me on a deload week because it's important for your central nervous system to, like, think things are a little easier. Can't always be building, building, building. You have to calm it down, yeah, so it's, it's so true, like our the way we approach things has to be different if we're listening to our body. Brad Crowell 39:47  Yeah and, you know, so yeah, listening to your body, being careful with your language, being willing to, being willing to, not, you know, whatever, reach the goal or hit the to be the epitome of the pose or, you know, in our in my case, it was often handstand, you know, when it was yoga, or for lifters, it's like, I gotta hit my max. Last max was, you know, this, so I gotta hit, I gotta at least hit that and then more, right, like, being willing to be like, okay, maybe right now it's okay if it's different, you know.Lesley Logan 40:24  Yeah, it's interesting how, like, some of those things, just you'd learn with age, but also.Brad Crowell 40:27  I think with age and also, like death. I never felt like I was gonna hurt myself in yoga. I never felt like I could crush my skull. Like, if you're benching and you have too much weight, your body could slip and fail, and you could have 150 pounds crashing on your body like, that was, that was the moment where I was like, oh, okay. Lesley Logan 40:47  So there it is, Anthony. We should have just probably go how to teach Brad he could have died, get a fucking broken his neck. Oh, my God. Okay, now we know. Well, I.Brad Crowell 40:59  But also that's translated, you know, like, I it took me an opportunity to learn, and then, you know, now, when I'm going back into my yoga practice, it's, doesn't have to be like, to the nth degree every single time.Lesley Logan 41:12  Yeah, I just show up. Like, that's where I'm at. I'm like, I'm really enjoying just showing up. So glad I get to do that. I'm like, I'm here today.Brad Crowell 41:20  I also feel a lot stronger, too, and less flexible. And I acknowledge that. Lesley Logan 41:25  You're no longer a shark boy. Brad Crowell 41:26  No. I mean, I don't think so. I'm still flexible, but I'm not like I was like before. Lesley Logan 41:31  You have mobility. Brad Crowell 41:32  Yeah, but I could put my foot behind my neck not in front of my head.Lesley Logan 41:35  I know, but you have but we need strength as we get older, it's really fucking hard to put it on. Anyways, I just this whole episode has so many gems I really enjoyed, like, reliving it. I think it's one that's worth going back to. And I think it's got, it's got a takeaway you might listen to differently each time you hear it. So, listen to it again. And I'm Lesley Logan. Brad Crowell 41:57  And I'm Brad Crowell. Lesley Logan 41:58  Thanks for listening. I want to hear reviews. I want to hear takeaways. I want your fucking questions. Send it in to beitpod.com/questions, also your wins. I want your wins. I want a lot. Okay, I want a lot. Brad Crowell 42:09  Yeah. We want it all. Lesley Logan 42:10  Yes, I can't I'm not gonna sing a song for you. Until next time, Be It Till You See It. Brad Crowell 42:14  Bye for now. Lesley Logan 42:16  That's all I got for this episode of the Be It Till You See It Podcast. One thing that would help both myself and future listeners is for you to rate the show and leave a review and follow or subscribe for free wherever you listen to your podcast. Also, make sure to introduce yourself over at the Be It Pod on Instagram. I would love to know more about you. Share this episode with whoever you think needs to hear it. Help us and others Be It Till You See It. Have an awesome day. Be It Till You See It is a production of The Bloom Podcast Network. If you want to leave us a message or a question that we might read on another episode, you can text us at +1-310-905-5534 or send a DM on Instagram @BeItPod.Brad Crowell 42:59  It's written, filmed, and recorded by your host, Lesley Logan, and me, Brad Crowell.Lesley Logan 43:03  It is transcribed, produced and edited by the epic team at Disenyo.co.Brad Crowell 43:08  Our theme music is by Ali at Apex Production Music and our branding by designer and artist, Gianfranco Cioffi.Lesley Logan 43:15  Special thanks to Melissa Solomon for creating our visuals.Brad Crowell 43:18  Also to Angelina Herico for adding all of our content to our website. And finally to Meridith Root for keeping us all on point and on time.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/be-it-till-you-see-it/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Innovation in Compliance with Tom Fox
Operationalizing Trust at Scale: Evolving Compliance: Neta Meidav on the Diligent Acquisition and AI Integration

Innovation in Compliance with Tom Fox

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2025 15:29


Innovation comes in many areas, and compliance professionals must be ready for and embrace it. Join Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance, as he visits with top innovative minds, thinkers, and creators in the award-winning Innovation in Compliance podcast. Today, we conclude our 3-part podcast series sponsored by Diligent with Jessica Czeczuga, Amanda Carty and Neta Meidav In this Part 3, Tom is joined by Neta Meidav, Managing Director of Ethics & Compliance at Diligent for a dive into technology innovations at Diligent.     In this episode, Tom visits with Neta about her recent transition to Diligent following its acquisition of her GRC entity Vault. Neta discusses the strategic reorganization at Diligent that underscores their commitment to compliance technology, and how this alignment bodes well for the future of their technology. She also sheds light on the integration of AI within compliance solutions, exploring its transformative impact on risk prediction, investigation processes, and operational efficiency, while emphasizing the enduring importance of human expertise in ethical decision-making.   Key Highlights   ·      The Acquisition Journey ·      Role and Responsibilities at Diligent ·      AI and Compliance Technology ·      Predictive Risk and Future of AI in Compliance   Resources: ⁠Neta Meidav on LinkedIn ⁠⁠Diligent⁠   Tom Fox ⁠Instagram⁠ ⁠Facebook⁠ ⁠YouTube⁠ ⁠Twitter⁠ ⁠LinkedIn

El Atole
SIGUE EL DESABASTO… ¡PERO DE GASOLINAS!

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2025 19:55


Esta semana en el Atole Podcast, una producción de FIA Podcast, hablamos sobre el desabasto de combustibles en la CDMX y la promesa de gasolinas a 10 pesos. ¿Neta preferimos apoyar a Cuba? Escucha el episodio.

El Atole
SYDNEY SWEENEY Y LOS JEANS DE HUMO

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2025 20:21


Esta semana en El Atole Podcast, el podcast No. 1 de Azteca Noticias, hablamos sobre la polémica woke que causaron los “Jeans” de Sidney Sweeney. ¿Neta discutir por un comercial o es cortina de humo? Escucha el episodio.

El Atole
ROBO DE COMBUSTIBLE… ¡Y NOSOTROS SALVANDO A CUBA!

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2025 19:39


Esta semana en el Atole Podcast, el podcast No.1 de FIA, hablamos sobre el robo de combustibles y el bodrio de “Gasolinas Bienestar”, una empresa creada para surtir petróleo y combustible a Cuba. ¿Neta en eso se gastan los impuestos? Escucha el episodio.

El Atole
LEY CENSURA: SE CHINGARON LA LIBERTAD DE EXPRESIÓN

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2025 27:46


Esta semana en El Atole podcast, el podcast No.1 de FIA, hablamos sobre la recién aprobada Ley de Telecomunicaciones, la Ley Censura. ¿Neta murió la libertad de expresión? Escucha el episodio.

El Atole
ISRAEL VS. IRÁN… ¿LA GUERRA FINAL?

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2025 20:06


Esta semana en el Atole Podcast, el podcast No. 1 de Azteca Noticias, hablamos sobre el conflicto entre Israel e Irán. ¿Neta habrá una guerra nuclear? Escucha el episodio.

El Atole
LOS ÁNGELES… NOOUOOO LA POLITZIA

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2025 22:03


Hoy en El Atole Podcast, analizamos los disturbios en Los Ángeles y las responsabilidades de Trump, Claudia Sheinbaum y los migrantes en Estados Unidos. ¿Neta es culpa de la presidenta? Escucha el episodio.

Noticentro
Peso mexicano alcanza su mejor nivel en 2025

Noticentro

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2025 1:44


Anuncia Brugada Plan Ambiental para el cuidado del medio ambiente¡No te lo pierdas! “¡El suelo es la neta del planeta!”Epidemia del mpox sin control en ÁfricaMás información en nuestro Podcast

El Atole
EL ATENTADO CONTRA EL EQUIPO DE CLARA BRUGADA Y MR. BEAST VS. INAH

El Atole

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2025 22:34


Esta semana en El Atole, el podcast No. 1 de Fuerza Informativa Azteca , hablamos del atentado en contra de Ximena Guzmán y José Muñoz, del equipo de Clara Brugada y de paso el desmadre de Mr. Beast con el INAH. ¿Neta una demanda? Escucha el episodio.

The Film Comment Podcast
Cannes 2025 #5, with Kong Rithdee and Neta Alexander

The Film Comment Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2025 37:50


Cannes 2025 has arrived—and you can count on our on-the-Croisette crew of Film Comment contributors to cut through the noise with thoughtful dispatches, interviews, and Podcasts. This year's festival is packed with exciting premieres, including new films from Richard Linklater, Lynne Ramsay, Spike Lee, Bi Gan, Julia Ducournau, Wes Anderson, and many more. For our fifth episode from the French Riviera, Film Comment Editor Devika Girish is joined by critic Kong Rithdee and scholar Neta Alexander to discuss some of the most highly anticipated premieres to screen to date, including Christian Petzold's Mirrors No. 3 (2:30), Sebastián Lelio's The Wave (16:50), and Kleber Mendonça Filho's The Secret Agent (27:14). Subscribe today to The Film Comment Letter for a steady stream of Cannes coverage, providing everything you need to know about the 2025 edition.

El Bueno, la Mala y el Feo
Cómo saber si es neta o puro show entre la ansiedad y la depresión

El Bueno, la Mala y el Feo

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2025 22:17


¡Échale oído! Porque no todo lo que suena a drama es depresión… y no toda la desesperación es ansiedad. Nuestra compa Sandy Caldera, la psicoanalista de la casa, nos pone los puntos sobre las íes y nos enseña a diferenciar entre una crisis real de salud mental y lo que puede ser un berrinche disfrazado. ¡Ojo con eso! Porque a veces confundimos la cosa y terminamos regándola feo con los que sí la están pasando mal. ¿Cómo saber si es neta o nomás están haciendo panchito? Descúbrelo aquí con nosotros. Mantente al día con los últimos de 'El Bueno, la Mala y el Feo'. ¡Suscríbete para no perderte ningún episodio!Ayúdanos a crecer dejándonos un review ¡Tu opinión es muy importante para nosotros!¿Conoces a alguien que amaría este episodio? ¡Compárteselo por WhatsApp, por texto, por Facebook, y ayúdanos a correr la voz!Escúchanos en Uforia App, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, y el canal de YouTube de Uforia Podcasts, o donde sea que escuchas tus podcasts.'El Bueno, la Mala y el Feo' es un podcast de Uforia Podcasts, la plataforma de audio de TelevisaUnivision.

Hidden Julz
Episode 44: Shanghaii

Hidden Julz

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2025 150:14


In Episode 44, I speak with Shanghaii, a videographer, director, designer & up and coming YouTuber. He is originally from Colorado now residing in Los Angeles. We navigate many different topics with Shanghaii including cultural identity, the growth and challenge of moving, how COVID impacted relationships with friends. We also talk more about the power of delusion through success, pushing through adversity and how sudden turmoil can literally flip your life around. We end with Shanghaii sharing more about how he went from Miami to Los Angeles. He tells us about his new business where you can customize your own jeans called NETA. He also opens up about his film school! Make sure you listen to learn more about this amazing individual!!!

Everyday Mulemanship
244. Western Mule Magazine- With Ben & Neta Tennison

Everyday Mulemanship

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2025 106:28


Ben and Neta Tennison have operated Western Mule Magazine since 1994 and have been at the forefront of the mule industry ever since. They both have some wonderful insight to offer any student of the mule. These two are amazing to listen to and I hope you enjoy it as much as I did!

Social Media and Politics
Youth Political Expression on Social Media, with Dr. Neta Kligler-Vilenchik and Dr. Ioana Literat

Social Media and Politics

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2025 48:44


Dr. Neta Kligler-Vilenchik and Dr. Ioana Literat share research from their new book Not Your Parent's Politics: Understanding Young People's Political Expression on Social Media.We discuss how young people use social media such as TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube to experiment with their political identity, even if they are too young to vote.  Examples from the 2016 US election, Black Lives Matter protests, and climate anxiety help illustrate the various ways that youth express their political opinions across social media platforms. We also discuss how to approach these expressions from a democratic and citizenship perspective. Dr. Kligler-Vilenchik is Associate Professor of Communication and Journalism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.Dr. Literat is an Associate Professor in the Communication, Media and Learning Technologies Design program at Teachers College, Columbia University.

La Corneta
Top10 #Frases Mexicanas Para Expresar Asombro

La Corneta

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2025 11:57


La Corneta
Top10 #Frases Mexicanas Para Expresar Asombro

La Corneta

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2025 11:57