Pungency is the condition of having a strong, sharp smell or flavor that is often so strong that it is unpleasant
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¡A 2 días de que arranque la Copa del Mundo! La mesa de Fútbol Picante con el debate sobre cómo llega la seleccion mexicana de Javier Aguirre para enfrentar a Sudáfrica en la inaguración. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Numa partida festiva e de baixa intensidade, Augusto Inácio destaca o regresso de Nehuén Pérez à equipa do FC Porto e a prestação de Petit ao comando do Santa Clara.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Trastienda 142: Casquería y picante, con Kaede Abrimos la Trastienda de Shadowlands para recibir a Vicky ‘Kaede’, con quien hablamos de dos temas que le ponen la etiqueta +18 a las películas, tienen potencial para incomodar y tienen que ver con la carne: la violencia gore y el erotismo. Sobre cómo tratar estos temas desde el consentimiento y aprovechando su potencial, charlamos hoy largo y tendido. Kaede es una de las autoras y creadora del sistema de de Dama de Corazones, nuestro recopilatorio de aventuras centradas en el romance y la sexualidad. Echadle un vistazo.Otras visitas de Kaede— Entrevista sobre Dama de Corazones: — Dirigir con notas en una servilleta: — Consentimiento. Music from #Uppbeat: The horseman by nigth drift License code: XGUNKD5PG9ROKUS6 Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): Lets good times roll by RALicense code: YUHJBIKTMVWNODBV
Descubre los beneficios y riesgos del chile picante en tu cuerpo: cómo puede acelerar tu metabolismo, mejorar la circulación y ayudar a adelgazar, pero también cuándo puede irritar tu sistema digestivo y afectar tu salud.
No todos los capítulos son normales… y este definitivamente no lo es.Sin Munir en la mesa (porque anda de luna de miel), Memo Rojas y Alex Escalera se quedan solos… pero no por mucho tiempo: porque el picante entra al juego.Entre noticias que sacuden la Formula 1 como la salida de Gianpiero Lambiase de Red Bull Racing y el impacto económico tras la cancelación de carreras, el episodio toma un giro distinto: una dinámica donde cada pregunta duele… y cada respuesta también. Literal.Una charla sin filtro sobre la carrera de Memo: sus inicios, el intento real de llegar a la F1, el retiro… y cómo nació Desde el Paddock.Porque hay historias que no se cuentan igual… hasta que el picante te obliga a decirlas como son.Este no es solo un capítulo más, es uno donde se mezclan paddock, trayectoria y verdad.
¿Con chile serrano o chile jalapeño? ¿Con tajín o con chiltepín? El mercado de las telecomunicaciones de México comienza a tomar otro sabor con la salida de Telefónica, y no es suavecito justamente. Que haya aparecido un jugador de la nube a hacerse cargo de un operador móvil virtual es todo un desafío en un mercado donde Telcel sigue siendo el prestador dominante. Güey esto se va poner realmente picante y vamos a conversar sobre la nueva sazón que tendrá el mercado mexicano ante este movimiento. Orale, acompañanos este viernes de podcast. Va a estar padrísimo.
No episódio de hoje, Flávio Trombino ensina a fazer uma maionese de bacon picante, ideal para servir com churrasco, hambúrgueres e até mesmo batata frita.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Full show: https://kNOwBETTERHIPHOP.com Artists Played: DJ Dolo76, Sleep Sinatra, Maze Overlay, conshus, E-Turn, Brooklyn Funk Essentials, Funky DL, Kendra Morris, Paul Cherry, Gorillaz, Asha Puthli, Bobby Womack, Black Thought, David Jolicoeur, Jalen Ngonda, Ego Ella May, Jill Scott, Tierra Whack, Odell, Adrian Younge, Picante, Tom Misch, Kumail, Fly Anakin, aja monet, BLAND, Mic Handz, Aul Purpis, Shabaka, M-Dot, Confidence, Masta Ace, OutKast, GOODie MOb, IMAKEMADBEATS
Seguimos con la ronda de agradecimientos varios por toda una vida de éxitos y fracasos o no.
Adal Franco, Desireé Monsiváis, Tuca Ferretti y Dionisio Estrada en la mesa de Fútbol Picante debaten tras el paso del América en la CONCACAF Champions Cup y el liderato de Chivas en la Liga Mx. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Adal Franco, Dionisio Estrada, Tuca Ferretti y Jorge Pietrasanta debaten en la mesa de Fútbol Picante con los temas más relevantes del fútbol mexicano. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
En este episodio de Inteligencia de Juego, Salomé y Samuel analizan los partidos más importantes de Nuestra Liga, las estadísticas más importantes de la Liga de Campeones arman la apuesta del partidazo de la fecha: Millonarios vs Nacional. ¿Cuál será tu Parlay? Apuéstalo en Rushbet.
En la Historia Sonora de hoy con Ana Francisca Vega por MVS Noticias: Turista alemán prueba salsa picante y demanda a taquería mexicana por 1.7 millones de pesosSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Vera com barba, uma criança que adora bróculos e uma omelete com picante.
Adal Franco, Ricardo Ferretti, Jorge Pietrasanta y Dionisio Estrada debaten en la mesa de Fùtbol Picante sobre la selección mexicana tras la lesión que sufrió Luis Ángel Malgón, arquero del América. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In 1947 Dave Pace spiced up America with Salsa and this turned into a 90 Billion Dollar category. Dave Young: Welcome to the Empire Builders Podcast, teaching business owners the not so secret techniques that took famous businesses from mom and pop to major brands. Stephen Semple is a marketing consultant, story collector and storyteller. I’m Stephen’s sidekick and business partner, Dave Young. Before we get into today’s episode, a word from our sponsor, which is, well, it’s us, but we’re highlighting ads we’ve written and produced for our clients. So here’s one of those. [ECO Office Ad] Dave Young: Welcome back to the Empire Builders Podcast. I’m Dave Young here talking to Stephen Semple. And the listeners may not know this because we only release these every week or so, right? Stephen Semple: Mh-hmm. Dave Young: But we often record them one after the other. And we just got done recording the episode about Doritos and Tostitos. And now you’re telling me that we’re going to talk about dip, Pace Salsa. Stephen Semple: Pace Salsa. Yeah. Dave Young: So the picante sauce people. Stephen Semple: Correct. Correct. Absolutely correct. Dave Young: And that’s great with Doritos. Stephen Semple: I never thought about it being with Doritos. Dave Young: Really? Stephen Semple: Tostitos, I would, but not Doritos. Dave Young: How about both? Stephen Semple: Okay. Dave Young: I say you can dip a Dorito into anything. I’m in that camp. I’m firmly in the camp that anything dippable is- Stephen Semple: You’re all-inclusive in your attitude towards Doritos and dip. Very open-minded. Here’s the thing I’m going to say. If someone has not listened to the Doritos, Tostitos story, you really should go back and listen to it before listening to this one because there’s certain things that kind of come together in terms of what’s happening in the world. Dave Young: Like chips and dip. Stephen Semple: And these stories are kind of linked even though this story starts in 1947. Well, the Doritos story starts in the late ’50s. They still have kind of a bit of a shared history. Dave Young: These stories that are on a collision course, a deathening. Stephen Semple: They are. And this story’s also not just about pace salsa, but it’s really about the origin of the salsa in the United States as a category, which is a $90 billion category. And the business was started by David Pace in 1947 in San Antonio and was sold to Campbell Soup in 1995 for $1.1 billion. Dave Young: All right. Stephen Semple: So not a bad little payday. Dave Young: Not a bad deal. Stephen Semple: Yeah. So now David Pace was from Louisiana and he moved to Texas after World War II. He had been running a small food business processing sugar substitutes, which were popular both during the war and shortly after the war with rationing because of the sugar rationing. But as rationing was coming off, what he knew is there was going to be less and less of a need for these sugar substitutes. So he was looking for a new idea. And so we have to remember, it’s 1947, food’s kind of boring in the United States. It’s not diverse. It’s bland. It’s meat and potatoes. The condiment that was used to improve food was ketchup. That was the condiment to improve food, right? And Mexican food was not really a thing. About the only thing that people knew about Mexican food, it was spicy. Here’s the part that I came across that really surprised me the most. In New York City, one of the most diverse cities in the world, and certainly the most diverse city in the United States, there was just one Mexican restaurant in the city and New York at the time. Dave Young: In the ’40s? City. Stephen Semple: In the late ’40s, ’47. Dave Young: Okay. Wow. Stephen Semple: There was only one. That was it. Now, you could get Mexican food in the South because let’s face it, 100 years previous, a lot of parts of the South were part of Mexico, right? Dave Young: That’s right. Stephen Semple: As we like to remind ourselves. So here he is in- Dave Young: Well, Tex-Mex started just spreading in. Stephen Semple: Yeah. So here he is in San Antonio. He was stationed in Texas during the war and he’d settled in San Antonio, but he had never had Mexican food because now he’s off the base living in San Antonio and he tries salsa for the first time. And he’s like, wow, this is great. And he decides he needs to bring it to the market. A couple of challenges he ran into. First is how to make it. There’s lots of recipes around. He wanted to make his own version to sell the non-Mexican, so he wanted to tone down the intense flavors. He also needed to be able to jar it so it had shelf life. Here’s one of the fun challenges he ran into. A couple of the recipes he worked with would ferment once put in a jar. Well, what happens in a jar when something ferments? Dave Young: Botulism? Stephen Semple: No, kaboom. They blow up. Dave Young: Kaboom. They blow up. Okay. Yeah. Stephen Semple: So exploding jars, exploding jars of salsas, not really the objective. Dave Young: That’s never a good look either. Stephen Semple: Not really. But he gets it figured out and he brands it as Pace Picante Sauce. So it was first of all, promote it as a sauce, not a dip. And he starts selling it locally. He advertises it in the newspapers, but again, not as a dip as a sauce, like a marinade, something you brush on meat before baking. That was how it was being positioned. Dave Young: Well, it’s still, that’s the label on the jar is Pace Picante Sauce. Stephen Semple: Yeah. Dave Young: I’ve always wondered about that. He did that so he didn’t have to… Well, go ahead. Stephen Semple: But that was just kind of how he thought about it. And so for over a decade, he works on building up a following in Texas. It was building slowly. He liked spicy food, but most people didn’t, because even though he took the spice down, it was still spicy. Now he hires his son-in-law, Kit Goldsbury, and Kit hates spicy food, like can’t stand it, but still thinks he can sell it. And Kit starts at the bottom working every job and works his way up. And there’s a point where Kit becomes more senior. And Pace is now in five states and is making some money. They’re having some success. Dave Young: Good. Stephen Semple: But Kit’s goal is he wants us to become coast to coast. He wants to turn this into a big thing. But here’s what he notices. It’s too hot for northerners, but northerners want flavor because they’re eating Doritos. They’re eating nacho Doritos and cheese Doritos. They’re eating those things. So it’s not like they don’t want flavor. They just don’t want the heat. Dave Young: Yeah. Stephen Semple: There’s a marker for something interesting, unique, and different, but to go national, he needs to mute the heat. Dave Young: Needs to call it mild. Stephen Semple: Right. And around this time, Tostitos takes off and which is being used for dipping and it’s a massive success. So he decides to lean into the dip angle because he saw what was going on with Tostitos and he said, “You know what? We need to make this as a dip, not as a sauce, but I still need to take down the heat.” So he hires tasters to try all the jalapenos out there to find out which is the one that would work the best. Here’s the problem. Taster’s results were really inconsistent. He goes, “Okay, so I’ve still got to solve this heat problem.” So he hires a food scientist to engineer a heat-free jalapeno. Dr. Rasplicka, I think is how you pronounce his name, who basically created this measurement system for capsaicin, which is about how hot it is. And from this, they were able to figure out how to remove the heat because they were able to identify each one, able to identify the source of it and create this non-heat version of salsa. Dave Young: Okay. Stephen Semple: Now, you jump the gun on it a little bit, as you often do. So remember, while Americans didn’t want heat, they wanted something interesting. So of course they didn’t call it bland. What did they call it? Dave Young: Stay tuned. We’re going to wrap up this story and tell you how to apply this lesson to your business right after this. [Using Stories To Sell Ad] Dave Young: Let’s pick up our story where we left off and trust me you haven’t missed a thing. Stephen Semple: Well, Americans didn’t want heat. They wanted something interesting. So of course they didn’t call it bland. What did they call it? Dave Young: Mild. Well, they’ve got the three. They’ve got mild, medium, and hot. Stephen Semple: Right. And that’s exactly what they did. They had the other spice levels, but they didn’t go with bland. They went with mild. Dave Young: Yeah, yeah, yeah. This the Goldilocks rule, right? Stephen Semple: Yeah. Dave Young: Wow. Stephen Semple: And so therefore, and with mild, everyone can enjoy it. And then of course they offered the other spice levels and they market it as a dip. Very quickly, sales went from $3 million to over $50 million. Dave Young: I can imagine. Stephen Semple: So successful, supermarkets started placing salsa in the chip aisle because it was not in the chip aisle previously. In 1991, salsa passes ketchup as the number one condiment in the United States. Dave Young: Not till ’91. Stephen Semple: Not till ’91. Dave Young: Okay. Stephen Semple: 1995, Campbell’s buys the business for over a billion dollars. Dave Young: All right. Stephen Semple: Now, I forget what year it was. I think it was ’92, but anyway, early ’90s, Campbell’s actually created a Heinz Salsa. Dave Young: Really? Stephen Semple: Yes. And it failed miserably. Dave Young: Sure. Stephen Semple: But if you think about it, we often bump in these situations where companies do these line extensions, right? Where it’s like, “Well, why not? It’s tomato. It’s a condiment. It’s all this other thing. We can do a Heinz Salsa.” Why wouldn’t a Heinz Salsa work? People love Heinz ketchup. They’ll love Heinz Salsa.” It bombed. It totally bombed. Like bombs so much to the degree that it only existed for about three years and they went, “You know what? Instead, we’ll spend $1.1 billion buying a competitor rather than trying to develop our own.” Dave Young: Heinz is what it is and you know what you’re getting. Stephen Semple: But how often do we see that whole line extension happen and it fails? Dave Young: Yeah. Stephen Semple: Right? Like Gerber’s wanting to make adult food. Dave Young: No. Stephen Semple: Doesn’t work. Heinz making salsa. Dave Young: Make adult food and call it something else. Stephen Semple: Coke understood this when they went into the energy drink market because it was not Coke energy drink. They knew that would fail. Coke understood that. They were like, “No, no. Coke’s a pop. It’s a soft drink. It’s not an energy drink. We’re going to have to do something completely different.” But it’s amazing how often businesses will make that mistake of, “Oh, well, we do this thing. Let’s also market ourselves this thing and do this line extension.” And it doesn’t work. It doesn’t work. Dave Young: I think there are just invisible boundaries that if you don’t know them and you try to cross them. And in this case, it’s the style of food, right? Heinz goes on certain things, but it doesn’t go on Mexican food. You don’t dump ketchup on Mexican food. You don’t dump mustard on Mexican food. And Heinz makes ketchup and mustard and relish. Stephen Semple: And pickles. Dave Young: Pickles and all of those things, but they’re definitely not things that you put on Mexican food. Stephen Semple: It’s interesting. I was having this conversation with Michael Torbet, one of our partners, because we’re dealing with a situation with a client, an existing client where we’re struggling with getting them to think about not doing a line extension. And I was sharing with him this whole story of Heinz and we were talking about Gerber and a bunch of other companies that tried to do line extension and have failed. And we got talking about ketchup. And I was saying to him, “Well, I think the reason why it didn’t work because ketchup is something that you put on hamburgers.” But I like how you put it. It’s not specifically about hamburgers, but the foods that you put ketchup on, because again, Heinz is successful in pickles and they’re successful in mustard, but there’s foods where pickles, mustard, and ketchup go together. Dave Young: Yeah. Stephen Semple: And none of those foods does salsa go on it. It’s a different food category that salsa goes on. So you could make salsa and you could probably make cheese and that would actually work. Where you think about it, ketchup and salsa from a manufacturing standpoint are closer than salsa and cheese. Dave Young: Yeah. Those are weird associations. Stephen Semple: In fact, those companies do make cheese. They make cheese with a little bit of jalapeno. Dave Young: Yeah, absolutely. They’re right there next to the picante sauce. Stephen Semple: But I loved how you expressed it, hidden barriers, but they exist. And if you cross those barriers, it doesn’t work. Dave Young: Yeah. Stephen Semple: Yeah. Very cool. I didn’t think about them as being hidden barriers. That’s an amazing observation. Dave Young: Like Rolex should never make a phone. Stephen Semple: Right. Dave Young: Right? Well, phones keep times like, yeah, but that’s not right. Anyway, that’s just an example. There’s just lanes. Stephen Semple: Right. But there’s a couple of luxury watch brands that tried to dip their toe into the smartwatch market and it didn’t work. Dave Young: Yeah. Stephen Semple: And Rolex was not one of them, but I can’t remember who did, but they did and it failed terribly, failed terribly. Part of the appeal to a Rolex is the handmade and craftsmanship and all this other stuff. Dave Young: Well, and I don’t know. I have an Apple Watch and I have an Apple Watch not so much so I can tell time, but so it can do some other things for me. Stephen Semple: Yes. Dave Young: It can notify me. I use the timer function all the time and I could just carry a stopwatch around my neck or some kind of timer. But I also noticed that Apple sells, you can buy really fancy, upgraded, shiny, gold, sparkly, diamond encrusted versions of Apple Watch cases. The thing still does the same thing, but I don’t know how popular that stuff is. I’m guessing it’s pretty niche. Stephen Semple: I’m going to guess it probably is. And again, it’s not a line extension. It’s an add-on to an Apple Watch. It’s not a different watch. It’s an add-on. Dave Young: I think the guy that’s buying a Patek Philippe… I don’t know. Stephen Semple: Philippe Patek? Yeah. Dave Young: Or even a Rolex. Stephen Semple: Were you? Yeah. Dave Young: You’re not buying it for the same reason you’re buying an Apple Watch of any sort. And you’re not going to be fooled by the glitz and glam of the accoutrement on an Apple Watch into thinking that you’re buying a fancy watch. Stephen Semple: Yeah. Dave Young: It’s still an Apple Watch. Stephen Semple: It’s still an Apple Watch. Yeah. It’s a different thing. Dave Young: Interesting. Yeah. Stephen Semple: Anyway. Dave Young: That’s a fascinating subject to just these invisible barriers. Stephen Semple: In a great book that covers this a little bit is the 22 by… Is it Al Ries and somebody? Dave Young: Trout and Ries, 22 Immutable Laws of Branding. Stephen Semple: Yeah. And one of the laws that they go through is basically don’t do line extension. And they’ve got some great stories in that book around it. And anybody interested in branding, it’s a great… I have it on my desk and it’s a bible I refer to because those 22 laws, yeah, they are like you break them at your peril. With all of Heinz power, it couldn’t extend that and instead gave up and spent a billion dollars buying a competitor. Dave Young: And probably didn’t rename it Heinz. Stephen Semple: They did not. They kept it as Pace. Yeah. Dave Young: And they learned their lesson. Stephen Semple: Yeah, exactly. Exactly. Dave Young: We’ve spent this time talking about Pace and just before this recording, we talked about Doritos, Tostitos. I’m getting kind of hungry. Are you getting hungry? Stephen Semple: Yeah. And of course we also talked a little bit about Taco Bell. Dave Young: Yeah. Yeah. Stephen Semple: As a sidebar. Yeah. A lot of food conversation here late in the afternoon. Dave Young: If people hear my tummy grumbling in the microphone, you know what’s going on. If we weren’t in different cities on the same continent, I’d suggest we go out and grab a bite somewhere, Stephen, but we’ll have to do that another time. Stephen Semple: We’ll have to do that another time. Exactly. Dave Young: I’ll bring the dip, you bring the chips. Stephen Semple: All right, you’re on. Dave Young: Thanks for bringing us the Pace story. Stephen Semple: All right. Thanks, David. Dave Young: Thanks for listening to the podcast. Please share us, subscribe on your favorite podcast app and leave us a big, fat, juicy five star rating and review at Apple Podcasts. And if you’d like to schedule your own 90-minute empire building session, you can do it at empirebuildingprogram.com.
Adal Franco, Dionisio Estrada, Jorge Pietrasanta y Cesár Caballero debaten en la mesa más Picante del fútbol mexicano. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Análisis Picante del desempeño del Guadalajara en los torneos Clausura 2025 y Apertura 2025 y lo que se espera del Rebaño para el año 2026. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Adal Franco, Jorge Pietra Santa, Dionisio Estrada y Toño Valle encienden la polémica: ¿Puede Cruz Azul reivindicarse en la Intercontinental? ¿Quién es favorito en la final, Toluca o Tigres? Prepárate para el debate más candente del fútbol mexicano rumbo al gran desenlace de la Liga MX. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
En entrevista para MVS Noticias con Ana Francisca Vega, Jovita Manrique presentó este viernes una nueva edición de su segmento “Molito”, donde, con su característico humor, ironía y mirada crítica, mostró los momentos en que la seriedad política se convirtió, sin querer, en comedia, dentro y fuera de México:See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Adal Franco, Héctor Huerta, Mario Carrillo y Miguel González analizan el inicio de las semifinales y discuten el impacto de Antonio Sancho como nuevo vicepresidente de Pumas. ¿Cómo cambia el panorama del fútbol mexicano? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Adal Franco, Héctor Huerta, José del Valle y Miguel Ángel Briseño analizan el duelo estelar de cuartos de final. ¿Quién da el primer golpe: Monterrey o América? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Miguel González, Jared Borgetti, Héctor Huerta y José del Valle debaten los favoritos, sorpresas y claves rumbo al inicio de la Liguilla. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
¿Sabías que el rábano picante se usaba en Grecia como afrodisiaco? ¿Cuál es uno de los movimientos con mayor crecimiento en Latinoamérica? ¿El arquitecto Luis Barragán no es arquitecto? ¿Qué novela sorprendió al mundo hispano en 1914? En este capítulo hablamos de: Rábano picante, La santa muerte, Luis Barragán, Niebla, Miguel de Unamuno, Y más datos sabrosos en los entremeses del Banquete del Dr. Zagal.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Miguel Ángel Briseño, Desirée Monsiváis, Dionisio Estrada y César Caballero se lanzan al análisis y la polémica: ¿Quién avanza a la siguiente etapa de la Liga MX? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Luego de la derrota ante Paraguay en Fecha FIFA, la mesa de Fútbol Picante con Miguel Briseño, John Sutcliffe, Dionisio Estrada y Cesár Caballero con el análisis de lo sucedido con la selección mexicana. Además Chispa Velarde visita el estudio para dar su punto de vista sobre los Pumas. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
En este episodio converso con Maji Phaneer, parte del equipo del podcast Picante pero Edificante y autora del nuevo libro “Contravía”.Maji comparte su historia, los momentos que marcaron su camino y el proceso detrás de escribir un libro que invita a caminar “contra la corriente” y volver a la intención original de Dios para nuestra vida.Una conversación auténtica, profunda y llena de reflexiones que inspiran a vivir con propósito.Escucha este episodio completo y descubre las ideas, experiencias y perspectivas que hacen de Contravía un mensaje necesario para esta generación.
La Selección Mexicana Sub-17 clasificó a octavos de final del Mundial de la categoría al dejar en el camino a su similar argentina; charla Picante con el técnico y portero del Tricolor juvenil; La Selección Mayor de México alista su duelo amistoso ante Uruguay; Luis Fernando Tena fracasó en su misión de llevar a Guatemala al Mundial. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
¿Alguna vez te has preguntado por qué el picante nos hace sufrir pero también nos encanta?
Mauricio Ymay, Ricardo Ferretti, Desirée Monsivaís y Dionisio Estrada analizan el Clásico Regio, debaten si Chivas está a un nivel superior al América y reflexionan sobre el legado de Ymay que se despide de Fútbol Picante y ESPN tras siete años. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
¡La gente que es rígida se rompe, pero la gente que es flexible sobrevive! Hoy, la tanatóloga Gaby Pérez Islas nos habla sobre la rutina y la forma en la que puedes romper tú con ella.Escucha Pregúntale a César en el podcast de Por el Placer de Vivir con César Lozano, en Uforia App, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, ViX y el canal de YouTube de Uforia Podcasts, o donde sea que escuches tus podcasts. ¿Cómo te sentiste al escuchar este Episodio? Déjanos tus comentarios, suscríbete y cuéntanos cuáles otros temas te gustaría oír en #porelplacerdevivir
Análisis Picante de lo que representa el jeugo entre Cruz Azul y América para la afición y el futbol mexicano en general; ¿Chivas clasificará de forma directa a Liguilla? Sebastián Abreu afirma que Gilberto Mora es un jugador de Clase A. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Full show: https://kNOwBETTERHIPHOP.com Artists Played: unselftitled, Yasiin Bey, Mos Def, conshus, Shinobi Stalin, Rakim, Rules, Bandit, Tali Rodriguez, ASTROLPHYLE, jlb9, Hannah Jadagu, Jamil Honesty, JR Swiftz, Griot Noy, Awon, Kev Brown, Blu, Real Bad Man, Genevieve Artadi, CARRTOONS, Topaz Jones, Phonte, BeMyFiasco, Kennebec, Miguel Atwood Ferguson, Yazz Ahmed, Jazzy Soto, Danny Brown, Dan Brown, Habitat 617, Vanzyl, Retro, Picante, Kramer, BetejayMadeIt, Carlita, Myd, 7xvethegenius, Erykah Badu, OutKast, GOODie MOb, IMAKEMADBEATS
Análisis Picante de lo que se espera del encuentro de cuartos de final del Mundial Sub20 entre México y Argentina; ¿quién se juega su última oportunidad de ir al Mundial con la Selección Mayor de México? ¿La regla 20-11 es más que necesaria en la Liga MX? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Análisis Picante de la victoria del Guadalajara en su visita al América en la Fecha 8 del Apertura 2025; ¿infuyó el arbitraje en el triunfo de Cruz Azul sobre Pachuca? ¿Mejoró Pumas en la ofensiva o enfrentó a un débil rival? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Análisis Picante de lo que se espera del Clásico Nacional entre América y Chivas, en donde el lleno está garantizado al agotarse las entradas; analizamos también el resto de la jornada 8 de la Liga MX, el futbol de estufa y más. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Nuestros expertos debaten en la mesa de Fútbol Picante qué selección tiene peor rendimiento a menos de un año de la Copa del Mundo: ¿EEUU o México?. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
El debate en Fútbol Picante con Miguel Briseño, Héctor Huerta, Desireé Monsiváis y Dionisio Estrada Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Adal Franco, Héctor Huerta, Dionisio Estrada y Cesár Caballero con el debate más Picante en el regreso del futbol mexicano. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Un día de estos… el duque se va a portar mal y se arma. Así nomás te lo digo.
Miguel Briseño, Dionisio Estrada, John Sutcliffe y Héctor Huerta con el análsis más Picante del futbol mexicano. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
¿Keylor Navas puede convertirse en el nuevo portero de Pumas? En Fútbol Picante, los analistas debaten la urgencia de reforzar la portería en Ciudad Universitaria y analizan si el arquero costarricense sería la solución ideal. Además, se discuten los temas más relevantes del fútbol mexicano e internacional. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Análisis Picante de las obligaciones que tendrá Cruz Azul en el Apertura 2025 con el plantel que está armando; Santiago Gimenez afirma que Javier Aguirre le ha devuelto identidad a la Selección Mexicana; Ángel Correa llega a Tigres y será el jugador mejor pagado del plantel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Análisis Picante de lo que se espera de la semifinal entre México y Honduras en Copa Oro; ¿Monterrey merecia más en los octavos del Mundial de Clubes? Los movimientos del Futbol de Estufa en la Liga MX. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Adal Franco, Jorge Pietrasanta y Cesár Caballero en la mesa de Fútbol Picante con Mauricio Ymay y Jared Borgetti desde Santa Clara California con el seguimiento a la selección mexicana. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Mauricio Ymay, Desireé Monsiváis, León Lecanda y Miguel Brsieño con el debate más Picante del futbol mexicano. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Mauricio Ymay, Héctor Huerta, Desireé Monsiváis, Adal Franco y John Sutcliffe debaten en la mesa más Picante del futbol mexicano. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Mauricio Ymay en cobertura con la selección mexicana, mientras Adal Franco, Héctor Huerta, Desireé Monsiváis y Dionisio Estrada debaten en la mesa de Fútbol Picante. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Análisis Picante de lo que se espera del duelo entre América y el LAFC en busca del último boleto al Mundial de Clubes; ¿Afectan a Cruz Azul los temas extracancha? Atlético de San Luis recibió a su nuevo entrenador, Guillermo Abascal. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices