Podcasts about pwr

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LTW Fancast
A Performance To Be Proud Of - Loughborough Lightning (H) Review with Hannah Crawfurd

LTW Fancast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2026 68:14


Hannah returns to talk to Jacob about the insane transfers happening in the PWR at the moment, as well as a bit of Lions chat. We speculate whether a certain Gabrielle Vernier or Ellie Kildunne could be wearing the red, green and white next season. After that we break down the East Mids Derby, in which Tigers Women saved their best performance till last, but it was not enough to achieve that elusive win. Enjoy this last episode of Season 3 of the Fancast!

Motley Fool Money
Opportunities in Europe's “Digital Sovereignty”?

Motley Fool Money

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2026 24:27


There's no big headline to point to here, but several small data points and policy decisions all point to one thing: Europe wants to build its own digital infrastructure. That could have profound implications for the mega tech companies in the US, but it could also mean opportunities in helping Europe build out a digital infrastructure for AI and autonomy. Plus, what to make of the Shiller CAPE ratio and how to use cash positions. Tyler Crowe, Matt Frankel, and Lou Whiteman discuss: - Apple fighting with the EU about Siri AI - What happens to big tech when Europe wants its own tech - Companies that could benefit from a European digital infrastructure boom - What's the CAPE ratio and why is it flashing warning signals? - In highly valued markets, should investors look at defensive stocks? - What's the best place to park your cash “on the sidelines”? Companies discussed: AAPL, ASML, AMZN, GOOG, AMAT, META, VRT, PWR, FIX, CSCO SBGSY, WM, NEE, BRK.B Host: Tyler Crowe Guests: Matt Frankel, Lou Whiteman Engineer: Dan Boyd Disclosure: Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. The Motley Fool and its affiliates (collectively, “TMF”) do not endorse, recommend, or verify the accuracy or completeness of the statements made within advertisements. TMF is not involved in the offer, sale, or solicitation of any securities advertised herein and makes no representations regarding the suitability, or risks associated with any investment opportunity presented. Investors should conduct their own due diligence and consult with legal, tax, and financial advisors before making any investment decisions. TMF assumes no responsibility for any losses or damages arising from this advertisement. We're committed to transparency: All personal opinions in advertisements from Fools are their own. The product advertised in this episode was loaned to TMF and was returned after a test period or the product advertised in this episode was purchased by TMF. Advertiser has paid for the sponsorship of this episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

in the LOOP Breakaway Roping Podcast
PWR: From First Generation Rodeo to Paving the Way for Women | Sami Jo Smith | #285

in the LOOP Breakaway Roping Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2026 49:38


In this episode of In The LOOP Podcast, Jordan Jo sits down with Sami Jo Smith for a powerful conversation about leadership, legacy, women's rodeo, faith, and the behind the scenes work it takes to build something that truly moves the industry forward. From growing up as a first generation rodeo kid in Cheyenne, Wyoming, to serving as Miss Frontier and building a career across RFD TV, The American, ERA, WCRA, and now Premier Women's Rodeo, Sami Jo shares the people, moments, and opportunities that shaped her path in the Western industry. The two also dive into the growth of PWR, the evolution of professional women's rodeo, the addition of rough stock, national television opportunities, athlete stories, family legacies, and why creating a true home for women in rodeo matters now more than ever. As the Director of Operations and Rodeo Administration for PWR, Sami Jo reflects on what it means to serve behind the scenes, build opportunities for cowgirls, and help carry a movement that is opening doors for the next generation. At the heart of the conversation is a reminder that legacy is not just about titles or organizations. It is about the impression you leave, the people you serve, and the impact that lasts long after the event is over.

The Canadian Investor
Braden Is Back to Talk AI, Jobs, Power Bottlenecks & Canada's Future

The Canadian Investor

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2026 40:18


In this episode, Simon, Braden, and Daniel break down the AI boom from multiple angles: whether today’s market resembles the dot-com bubble, why demand for compute, electricity, and data keeps accelerating, and where the biggest bottlenecks are starting to appear. They also discuss how AI could reshape the job market, why companies may eventually need to “right-size” their AI usage, and whether cheaper models could become a major theme in the years ahead. The conversation then shifts to Canada’s economic challenges, including weak GDP growth, poor consumer sentiment, declining incentives for entrepreneurs, and why Canada risks losing more talent and high-growth companies to the U.S. Tickers of stocks discussed: NVDA, TSM, MU, MSFT, META, GOOGL, AMZN, ORCL, PWR, RBNK, SHOP Watch the full video on Our New Youtube Channel! Check out our portfolio by going to Jointci.com Our Website Canadian Investor Podcast Network Twitter: @cdn_investing Simon’s twitter: @Fiat_Iceberg Braden’s twitter: @BradoCapital Dan’s Twitter: @stocktrades_ca Want to learn more about Real Estate Investing? Check out the Canadian Real Estate Investor Podcast! Apple Podcast - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Spotify - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Web player - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Asset Allocation ETFs | BMO Global Asset Management Sign up for Fiscal.ai for free to get easy access to global stock coverage and powerful AI investing tools. Register for EQ Bank, the seamless digital banking experience with better rates and no nonsense.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Radio LUZ
Przed pasją nie uciekniesz: rozmowa z Maciejem Walczyńskim - informatykiem z wyboru i muzykiem z powołania

Radio LUZ

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2026 35:28


Dr Maciej Walczyński – dla studentów PWr: promotor prac dyplomowych i prowadzący zajęcia z programowania; dla uczniów ALO: pan od informatyki. Ale dla bliższych znajomych to przede wszystkim człowiek z pasją. Jazzman, kompozytor, aranżer, leader i manager Jazz Dreamers – to role, w których pasja go obsadza. O tym – jak muzyka może wdzierać się w każdy wolny moment życia i co zrobić, żeby ją obłaskawić – z artystą rozmawia Marek Kopel.

The Good, The Scaz & The Rugby
The Semi Final RACE: Can Gloucester Hartpury Win Four?

The Good, The Scaz & The Rugby

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2026 60:08


Who will make the PWR semi finals… it could all be sewn up this weekend!! The girls discuss all the runners and riders of the final two rounds before the play offs.Our Mo gets emotional at Zoe Stratford, Tatyana Heard and Sarah Beckett, leaving Gloucester-Hartpury for Sale Sharks at the end of the season.We also get updates on Mo's BIG win at a Bingo Lingo - you won't believe what she won - Scaz's annual sunflower planting, Elma's new kitty-ket socks!The great 4.5 rugby ball debate rumbles on, too!And we'd already recorded when it was announced that Jo Yapp will be the first ever Women's Lions Head Coach - so the girls will be reflecting on that next week with their guest. For more information on Mitsubishi Electric's Parallell Potential programme: parallelpotential.com Saracens Semi Final Tickets: https://www.eticketing.co.uk/northamptonsaints/Events?preFilter=10&preFilterName=Home%20GamesGloucester Hartpury Semi Final Tickets: https://ealingtrailfinders.ticketco.shop/PWR Final Tickets: https://www.eticketing.co.uk/harlequins/EDP/Event/Index/2108Barbarians Tickets: https://www.eticketing.co.uk/rfu/EDP/Event/Index/3357 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

LTW Fancast
Wait a minute, the PWR is back? Harlequins (A) Preview with Hannah Crawfurd

LTW Fancast

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2026 63:39


Hannah returns, disheartened from Wales' 6 Nations campaign but buzzing to talk about the PWR returning as Tigers Women travel to Quins away. Before then, we talk about the big transfers of Tatanya Heard and Zoe Stratford to Sale, bemoan Sale's social media admins' lack of geographical knowledge, and all these cool re-signing videos being dropped by Tigers Women. As Tigers return to action from literally the longest international break ever, we ponder whether it's better to look towards the future and give some U23s players a run out against Quins before going all out at home against Loughborough. Enjoy the episode!

Hamin Media Group
“What if”… Paul Heyman Joined TNA In The 2010s?

Hamin Media Group

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2026 84:01


It's time to see if the PWR boys can change wrestling history for the better... in a very special “What-If edition that's near and dear to the Professor!!! As a Paul Heyman guy, Professor wants to see with the help of TW if they can make Paul Heyman successful in TNA Wrestling during the 2010s!!! Who would benefit from Paul Heyman's TNA vision? And more importantly, can Paul be a successful fixture in the wrestling landscape??? This is a fun and an incredibly interesting discussion Reflectionites!  

Bears Beyond The Gate
Ep 227 - Worse than a shellacking? Lower than a nadir? We try to make sense of Friday!

Bears Beyond The Gate

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2026 50:07


It's a sombre pod and many things have already been said about Friday's chastening and record-breaking defeat against Saints across various platforms. There are lots of interrelated reasons why teams lose matches both contextual and in the heat of battle, but ultimately shipping that many points to a rival is almost impossible to comprehend let alone accept.How do you analyse a game like that? We do our best to try and put in into perspective and discuss some of the issues that it raises. Hopefully it is fair and balanced although we appreciate that everyone has their own opinions and that's absolutely fine.Although mathematically still possible it is fair to say that the hopes of a play-off spot are now swimming with the fishes but we do have a home game against Bath to look forward to in a couple of weeks. It is a chance for both players and fans alike to dig deep and try to purge the memory of Franklins Gardens.Lets get the Gate rocking and keep that home Prem win streak intact.We also remind everyone that the PWR will start again on May 30th with the Bears Women playing Chiefs at Shaftesbury Park. It is actually the last home game of the season but will be 'pink' themed in order to raise money for breast cancer aweeness and research so get yourself along.Up the wounded Bears!Let us know what you think!

Hamin Media Group
THIS YEAR IN PRO WRESTLING HISTORY! 1994

Hamin Media Group

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2026 106:13


After a week off for the Professor's birthday celebrations, it's back to the grind for the PWR!!! The boys will talk about the year of 1994 in pro wrestling where one organization, the WWE, was trying to get the next generation over while another organization, WCW, was trying to get into the national spotlight with the help of the greatest 80s icon, Hulk Hogan!!!! We also talk about the birth of Extreme and the death of the NWA with one title drop to the floor by Shane Douglas!!! This is one great reminiscing discussion Reflectionites!!!  

Cherry Jam - A Gloucester Rugby Supporter Podcast
Series 7 - Episode 25: Gloucester win back to back league games; Glos-Hartpury re-signings and a departure; Ealing, Cornish Pirates and the CHAMP playoffs

Cherry Jam - A Gloucester Rugby Supporter Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2026 75:31


For the first time this season, Gloucester secured back to back wins in the PREM after a hard fought victory over Sale Sharks at Kingsholm. We chat through the game, the reffing and whether we may have been too harsh (probably, but it was definitely a knock on before the George Ford drop-goal). Are there possibly some embryonic signs of improvement for next season?Meanwhile, Glos-Hartpury continue their preparation for next season with multiple re-signings (and a departure) announced. We look ahead to the final weekend of the W6N and the last few games of the PWR campaign.Finally, while Ealing will be preparing for their CHAMP playoffs and potentially a move to the URC, we discuss Cornish Pirates new investment from across the pond and what that might mean for Gloucester.

Rugby Union Weekly
Women's Six Nations: Super Sunday Preview

Rugby Union Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2026 57:45


Will England claim an eighth successive Six Nations? Or will France finally beat the Red Roses and claim a first title since 2018? Ugo, Sara and former Ireland international Anna Caplice look ahead to the big showdown in Bordeaux. Could England's leaky defence cost them on Sunday? Are England demanding too much of their star centre Meg Jones? Ireland's first standalone fixture at the Aviva is expected to attract 30,000 fans. Anna explains what a watershed moment this will be for Irish rugby. Wales face Italy hoping to avoid another wooden spoon – can Sean Lynn finally deliver a first Six Nations win? Plus, should Ireland and Wales enter a team in the PWR? Will it help close the gap to England in the future?

For The Love Of Rugby
Red Roses Secrets, Toughest Opponents & Rugby Aura | Ruby Tui & Shaunagh Brown Answer Your Questions

For The Love Of Rugby

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2026 50:07


Ruby Tui and Shaunagh Brown return to the For the Love of Rugby studio to answer your questions. Who's the toughest opponent they've ever played against on a rugby pitch? How early do they arrive at the airport? Who do they think will win the PWR this season? And where does a former Red Rose and Black Fern do their big shop these days? It's all revealed in the this episode.

LTW Fancast
Tigers Women U23s for the win (quite literally): Sale Sharks U23s (A) Review with She's the Champ Pod

LTW Fancast

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2026 56:06


Bluebell Nicholls, Champ 1 player and host of the She's the Champ podcast joins Jacob to discuss Tigers Women U23 fixture against Sale Sharks, and what that means for both the PWR development programs as well as for Champ 1 rugby!This is also available in audiovisual form on YouTube, so go check that as well! I know there are some audio blips in this episode due to connectivity issues so I do apologise for that but as ever let me know in the comments your feedback!Enjoy!

in the LOOP Breakaway Roping Podcast
#280 - PWR: The Youth and Future of Breakaway Roping | Blakely Boardman & Emmry Edwards

in the LOOP Breakaway Roping Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2026 48:04


In this episode of In The LOOP, Jordan Jo sits down with Blakely Boardman and Emmry Edwards—two rising stars in breakaway roping—for a conversation rooted in growth, confidence, and the future of women's rodeo. At just 14 and 16 years old, these two are already competing—and winning—on some of the biggest stages in the sport. But what stands out most isn't just their talent… it's their mindset. From jackpot arenas to PWR, they share what it looks like to chase big goals at a young age—while staying grounded in hard work, family, and the love of the game. They open up about competing against the best, learning from every run, and why they truly believe they belong in the box with anyone. At the core of it all is a simple belief: Work just as hard—and you're on the same level. This episode is a reminder that the future of breakaway roping is already here… and it's only getting faster.

Hacker Public Radio
HPR4628: Nuclear Power Technology Follow Up

Hacker Public Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2026


This show has been flagged as Clean by the host. -------------------- 01 Introduction This is a follow up to my 8 part series on nuclear power. In this episode I will answer questions posed by listeners in the comments to the series. I would like to start by thanking these people for taking the time to submit interesting questions. -------------------- Costs of Small Versus Large Reactors 02 brian-in-ohio asked two questions The first was for a cost comparison between large and small reactors. The second was for nuclear plant safety compared to conventional power plants. 03 Answer I think that any answer to the second question is going to be perceived by some people as politically controversial, so it's probably not a good topic for HPR to address. 04 The first question though about cost of small versus large reactors is an interesting one, although not one that is easy to give an answer to. I will restrict the answer to just grid scale electric power production and ignore use cases such as industrial process heat or power for remote mines and communities. 05 This question comes down to economies of scale versus economies of replication. Economies of scale centre around increased efficiencies of use of materials and labour when making something bigger. For example, the amount of steel used by a pipe increases linearly with its diameter, but the amount of fluid that it transports increases with the square. 06 Economies of replication come from increasing efficiencies which result from serial production. As you repeat the same design over and over again, you learn how to do things better and make fewer mistakes. 07 The exact same principles apply to shipbuilding. Indeed, a lot of the inspiration for Small Modular Reactors comes from the shipbuilding industry. If you build a series of identical ships, then each subsequent ship will cost less and be built faster. There are of course diminishing returns to this process, so the improvements are less with each additional unit and after a sufficient number of units the cost and time reductions level off. 08 However, this doesn't discount the benefits of economies of scale. What it does mean is that there are two ways of approaching the problem, and which way works in any given scenario depends on such conditions as how big the local electricity market is how fast the demand for electricity is growing, the ownership and financing structure of the electricity market, and the geography of the area, which may pose limits on the number of sites. 09 According to the finance people who have crunched the numbers, there are two sizes of reactor which make the most sense in the above context. These are 300 MW and 1000 MW. However, take those as very rough numbers rather than immutable laws of nature and other sizes may work as well. 10 The key point is that there are cases to be made for both small and large reactors, with the large reactor being several times the size of the small one. 11 An additional factor is that building only one reactor does not reap the benefits of efficiency of replication. You need to build a series of them on the same site. So if you are building a power plant, you don't build a power plant that has just one reactor unless you are in a small market which can only use that much power. Instead, you should build between 4 and 6 reactors in sequence next to one another. 12 If you are supply a large population with a growing demand for electricity, then 4 or 6 large 1000 MW reactors gains both economies of scale and economies of replication. If you are supplying a smaller population with slow growth in demand for electricity, then 4 or 6 300 MW reactors at least gets you economies of replication. 13 There is what could be viewed as an interesting example in terms of the above taking place just east of Toronto. There they are building four 300 MW SMRs on a site next to an existing nuclear power plant. 14 Here are the cost estimates from the Government of Ontario. All costs are in Canadian dollars. Unit 1 is $6.1 billion, plus $1.6 billion in costs which are shared by all four unit.s Unit 2 is $4.9 billion. Unit 3 is $4.2 billion. Unit 4 is $4.1 billion. 15 As you can see, building a series of reactors sequentially on the same site results in declining overall costs. They are very confident in these costs as they used data from a series of major nuclear power plant refurbishment projects in Ontario which have been coming in on time and on budget. 16 Construction began last year and the plant is expected to have a 65 year operating life. 17 However, the province of Ontario also has plans for expansion of electrical generation by about 15,000 MW by 2050 in order to meet net zero targets. 18 Given the heavy concentration of population in the Toronto region, and the very high cost and difficulty of building long distance transmission lines, and the limited number of sites which could host new power generation facilities of any sort, I suspect it is quite likely that subsequent reactors will be large 1,000 MW ones rather than SMRs. 19 The Wesleyville site (which is further east of Toronto) is tentatively scheduled for a 10,000 MW nuclear power plant. That would seem to make ten 1,000 MW reactors more likely than 34 300 MW reactors. 20 I don't have a comparable set of numbers for building large reactors to give an exact apples to apples comparison of costs. Different countries use different accounting and financing systems, and finance makes a huge difference to overall costs for nuclear power as operating costs are a relatively small share of the total. 21 Now to look at another side of this equation, the provinces of Saskatchewan and New Brunswick wish to replace their coal fired power plants with nuclear power plants. The populations of these provinces are too small to absorb a large new power plant into their grids, and studies assuming large reactors have foundered on this issue. 22 New Brunswick already have a nuclear power plant, but it was build in the days when reactors were much smaller. Both provinces however are very interested in small reactors, even individual ones, in order to replace the coal fired plants that are of similar size. 23 I think this covers the cost versus size issue. The more I look into it, the more it becomes apparent that there is no simple one size fits all answer but rather there are a series of trade-offs which must be taken in light of local circumstances. -------------------- MOX Fuel in the USA 24 The next question comes from mnw who asked about the use of MOX fuel in the USA. 25 mnw asked I am enjoying and look forward to the rest of the series. Do you think the US will ever wake up and start recycling its spent fuel? It seems like such a huge waste just to try and keep a small amount of fuel away from"the bad guys" or whatever they are imagining. Answer 26 My answer to this is as follows. I think I've addressed this in the original series, although not directly with respect to the US so I can provide some more detail on that aspect of it. 27 First though I will review what plutonium-uranium mixed oxide (MOX) fuel is. As mentioned in previous episodes, military grade plutonium is not the same as the plutonium which comes out of commercial power reactors. Just as military grade uranium requires nearly pure U-235 isotope, military grade plutonium requires nearly pure Pu-239 isotope. 28 What comes out of a commercial power reactor as spent fuel is not usable for weapons purposes as the proportion of Pu-239 is much too low. However, plutonium recovered from spent fuel can be used as fuel for nuclear reactors in place of uranium 235 when mixed with uranium 238 either left over from enrichment or extracted from spent fuel. This is what is known as MOX fuel. 29 To look at the US history of this however, here's the sequence of events. The US banned fuel reprocessing in 1976. However, this ban was repealed in 1981. 30 In 2005, the US began building a mixed-oxide (MOX) fuel plant at Savannah River in the state of South Carolina. However, this plant was not intended as a normal commercial operation and it was not intended to recycle commercial nuclear power plant fuel. It was instead intended to convert surplus military grade plutonium into commercial fuel in order to get rid of it as part of an arms control program. 31 The program was suspended in 2018. There were apparently many complex political issues involved in these on-again off-again decisions and I won't pretend to have the time or interest to explore all the details nor do I think most listeners would be interested in hearing abou them. 32 As of March 2026, the US are looking at reviving part of the Savannah River plant to produce limited amounts of fuel for testing of advanced reactors. The issue driving this is the shortage of uranium enriched to just below 20%. This fuel is used in certain types of small SMR. 33 The main commercial supplier of this material was a plant in Russia, but "certain events in Europe in recent years" shall we say, have resulted in that supply no longer being available to commercial operations in the US. MOX fuel based on surplus weapons grade plutonium is intended as a short term quick fix for that problem. 34 Another driving force is legal requirements following from domestic commitments for the US government to dispose of certain stockpiles of weapons grade plutonium from certain sites in the US where it is "temporarily" stored, and the solution to that is seen as burning it up in power reactors. 35 So the history is the US banned fuel reprocessing. Then a few years later they un-banned it. Then the US government started building a MOX plant which was intended to get rid of surplus weapons grade material by burning it up in power reactors. Then they decided they didn't want to do that. Then they decided they may want to make MOX fuel after all to replace supplies of special grades of fuel for experimental or prototype reactors. 36 What is missing from the above history is any actual interest from the US commercial nuclear industry in MOX fuel. The reason for this is, as mentioned in the previous episodes, uranium is so cheap and abundant that fuel made from fresh uranium is cheaper than MOX fuel. 37 Some countries such as France wish to recycle spent fuel to reduce their dependence upon imports. Recall that France's drive to build nuclear power plants was in response to the 1970s era energy crisis when oil imports from the Middle East were suddenly cut off. However, the US are not concerned about this issue and so do not make it national security policy as France did. 38 As a result, US commercial demand is for cheaper fuel made from fresh uranium rather than for MOX fuel. Until such time as fresh uranium greatly increases in price there is little economic incentive for the use of MOX fuel in the US. 39 However, there is another aspect to this. If you recall in previous episodes I described molten salt reactors which used dissolved uranium fuel. These reactors inherently reprocess fuel as part of their normal operation. They just do it as part of maintaining the molten salt chemistry at the correct values rather than doing it as a separate process. 40 If these types of reactors become widely used then they would be achieving the same thing as creating MOX fuel, but without an explicit separate step. 41 As a final footnote to the above, the US has almost exclusively use enriched uranium light water reactors. As mentioned in previous episodes, there are ways of recycling spent fuel from light water reactors which do not involve chemically reprocessing it to make MOX fuel. 42 Experiments have been done involving South Korea, China, and Canada which take spent fuel from light water reactors and repackage it to fit it into natural uranium heavy water reactors. What is used up or "spent" fuel for a light water reactor is high grade fuel to a natural uranium reactor. However, the US has, for whatever reason, never built commercial natural uranium reactors such as are used in a number of other countries around the world. 43 If they were to do so, then nuclear fuel could be used twice, once in a light water reactor, and again in a natural uranium reactor, all without having to turn it into MOX fuel in a separate reprocessing step. However, this particular alternative would likely face the same issue in the sense that fresh fuel would still be cheaper than reusing spent fuel. -------------------- A Variety of Questions from Clinton 44 Next we have a variety of questions from Clinton. Clinton asked I would like some commentary in the current situation, why has hinkley gone off the rails, the new american approach, the odd things done after fukushima, the new radiation rules in the states. 45 Question 1 why has hinkley gone off the rails, 46 Answer The question refers to cost overruns at the Hinkley Point nuclear power project in the UK. The UK government looked into this issue in a more general sense in 2025. They published a report on it titled Nuclear Regulatory Review 2025 Enabling nuclear delivery through regulatory reform John Fingleton There is a link to the report in the show notes. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/692080f75c394e481336ab89/nuclear-regulatory-review-2025.pdf 47 As the report is 162 pages long, I won't try to cover it all in this answer. I will however give a few simple examples. The report focuses on civilian nuclear power and the defence nuclear industry as well. However it also draws examples from outside the nuclear industry to show that the problem is not limited to nuclear. It shows that the same problems exist in the offshore wind industry, and in the HS2 High Speed Rail project. 48 In the view of the authors of the report, the essence of the problem seems to be a lack of any degree of proportionality in terms of mitigating negative effects from any project. Big nuclear projects make the headlines because they are inherently big projects, but as I have just mentioned, they affect things like wind power development and rail transport as well. 49 I will pick one example from Hinkley Point specifically. This is "Case Study: Hinkley Point C Fish Protection" A summary of this is that they spent £700 million of additional money on the cooling water intakes to protect an estimated 0.083 salmon per year, along with 0.028 sea trout, 6 river lamprey, 18 Allis shad, and somewhere between 100 and 528 twaite shad. The report points out that there are ways to protect far more fish for far less money by spending it in other areas, and gives some examples. Again, this problem is not limited to nuclear power, and they give similar examples connected with offshore wind development and HS2 High Speed Rail. 50 I would like to emphasize that I am not expressing an opinion on whether or not any of these decisions were good or bad ones or whether the money was well spent. I am just summarizing the report's explanation of why large projects of all sorts initiated and approved by the UK parliament were not turning out as initially expected. I will leave it up to people in the UK to decide whether or not they are satisfied with the current situation. 51 Question 2 the new american approach, 52 Answer The US have apparently announced changes to their regulatory system. I don't know enough about the subject to really judge the practical effects of regulation within the US. However, I have read and listened to many interviews of people from both the industry and the regulatory side of things who are from outside the US but are familiar with it. They generally contrast two different approaches to regulation. On the one hand there is the US approach, which they see as being more of a box ticking exercise than an in depth safety review. This makes it very hard to get a design other than a traditional PWR or BWR approved in the US. 53 It has the advantage from the regulator side of things though in that it reduces the amount of work required as it primarily requires just following a set of defined procedures. These people then contrast that approach with the one used in the UK and in Canada, both of which they see as being very similar to one another. In those two countries, regulators work with industry to review designs from basic principles rather than just seeing if it meets a pre-defined list of criteria. This is a results oriented system rather than a process oriented system as used in the US. 54 As a result of this, designers of new nuclear reactors are going to the UK and Canada first to go through preliminary review there, and only going to the US later. What designers are looking for is feedback on their design as they go along in order to align the design with what safety regulators see as being required from their standpoint. They want to go into a review process before the design is finalized so they can get guidance on how they should approach things rather than trying to add safety as additional features on top of a finished design. 55 It would take someone with deep familiarity with nuclear regulation systems to understand the practical effects of recent changes in US regulatory systems, but it is quite possible that people within the regulatory structure in the US have been taking the above on board and trying to adapt to current circumstances. However, I can only speculate on that. This is about the best answer that I can give. 56 Question 3 the odd things done after fukushima, 57 Answer This covers a lot of topics, some of which are probably political and so are not suited to HPR. I will try to list a few events however. As a brief summary if the Fukushima events go however, a historic scale earthquake and tsunami in Japan in 2011 caused huge loss of life and widespread damage. About 20,000 people were killed by the earthquake and tsunami. Three nuclear reactors based on 1960s era GE BWR designs were seriously damaged by hydrogen explosions caused by loss of power to backup generators when they were flooded by the tsunami. However, there were no radiation related deaths or cases of radiation sickness. 58 Following events in Japan was a general review of designs around the world, with various improvements made in some areas, particularly backup generators and hydrogen management. It seems to be conventional wisdom that the Fukushima event caused a number of countries to decide to phase out nuclear power. 59 However, when I tried to make a list of such countries for this episode I found things were not as is often heard. The countries which decided to get rid of nuclear power had largely started down that road at least a decade before then and generally for reasons unrelated to any specific events outside of their own country. In other cases they reversed that decision or are in the process of doing so. Japan itself has restarted many of their nuclear power plants and plant to replace decommissioned nuclear power plants with new ones, although many of the older and smaller ones were considered not economically worth upgrading at this point in their life to restart them. 60 The one possible exception to this may be Taiwan which decided to phase out nuclear power in 2016. However, I don't know enough about Taiwanese politics to state with any confidence that their decision in 2016 was based on anything related to events in Japan, or whether in fact they were a byproduct of other political changes within Taiwan and the shut down of nuclear plants happened to be carried along with those. Currently Taiwan get their electricity primarily from natural gas and coal. 61 Meanwhile across mainland Asia from Turkey to China, large numbers of nuclear power plants were built or are under construction. Taken together on a global scale, did anything really change after Fukushima, or did the countries which had already decided to close down their nuclear power plants simply continue to do so, and those countries who decided they wanted more of them continue to build them? That's a good question for which I don't think anyone has the perspective to answer at this point. 62 Another side of this which is hard to disentangle from it though is the increased use of natural gas for electric power generation which was happening at around the same time. Increased use of fracking in a number of countries, plus increased supplies from Russia and LNG from the Middle East and other places resulted in falls in natural gas prices in many places. Since combined cycle natural gas turbines form the main competitor to nuclear power, anything which improves the economics of natural gas will act to reduce demand for nuclear power. This makes it hard to decide to what degree the reduction in the number of reactors being built was due to the political effects of the earthquake and tsunami and to what degree it was due to cheaper natural gas through fracking and other means. I'll leave that question at that. 63 Question 4 the new radiation rules in the states. 64 Answer I'm not deeply familiar with US radiation rules, but I will attempt to answer the question. Apparently there are wide variety of different things being addressed, only some of which have any relevance to the nuclear power industry. One of these is an epidemiological study on the current exposure limits for workers in the nuclear industry. This study will take place over about 5 years. In the end it may not result in any changes. This is for a number of reasons. 65 One is that US exposure thresholds for workers are currently aligned with international standards. It would be difficult for the US industry to operate on a different basis than the rest of the world when supply chains are global and kit is designed to meet currently recognized standards. Another is that apparently the nuclear industry are not, so far as I can discern, asking for any changes to limits. They instead are looking for changes to how some of the details are being applied, such as for example the criteria for deciding when respirators are required in low risk environments. 66 Some point to recent changes in UK regulations as an example of what they are looking for. I will post a link to the new (November of 2025) UK regulations in the show notes. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/nuclear-industry-principles-to-guide-the-application-of-as-low-as-reasonably-practicable-alarp-and-best-available-techniques-bat/ways-of-working-principles-to-guide-the-application-of-alarp-and-bat-in-the-nuclear-industry-accessible-webpage This is about as much detail as I think I can comment on when it comes to this question, as I think it is a subject that requires a fair bit more practical knowledge of than I have in order to give a thorough and balanced answer. -------------------- 67 Question from Antoine Were/are the designs patented? Hi, Whiskeyjack. Nice ep. You said AGR, based on Magnox, was a nuclear reactor type that did not sell well outside the UK. I then started thinking if it were (is) possible to another countries to develop by themselves based on that project, or if it had (has) a commercial restriction for exploration of the technology. I have yet to listen to the following episodes (doing little by little) and may learn better on the choices, but I felt free to present the question by now... Thanks! 68 Answer This is a very good question because it offers the opportunity to talk about a number of interesting things that haven't been touched on yet. Let's cover a bit of background first. 69 A patent is a time limited right to exploit a defined bit of valuable technical knowledge. Patents were involved from the very earliest days of commercial nuclear power, and I will give an example of this later. A key point to keep in mind though is that the nuclear power field moves very slowly and it takes a long time for new knowledge to make it from the lab to commercial application. Patents will often expire before they reach the point where they can be used. 70 Contracts on the other hand are legally enforceable agreements between two parties. A contract may have a time limited life, but that is an arrangement between the parties. A commercial nuclear power plant is a very large and complex bit of kit and not easily copied in detail. It can be far more effective to cover designs under contracts and licenses than to rely on patents. If a country wished to build their own nuclear power plants rather than buying them from someone else, there are a large number of companies who have commercial designs they are willing to license to third parties for them to build themselves. Indeed a number of these companies base their business around licensing of designs or have other reasons for wishing to do so. 71 From a licensee perspective, it could take decades of work and hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars to take a design from first principle to the ready to build state, wheras licensing a design give you a proven design right away. As mentioned in previous episodes, there many types of reactor in the world. The selection of what sort of reactor a country decides to buy often depends more on commercial considerations revolving around licensing terms and conditions than it does with respect to any technical considerations. Here's an example which shows how South Korea decided to license a design, build it for themselves, and then export it to other countries. 72 KunMo Chung - Professor at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, stated in an interview in 2019 that South Korea wanted to standardize on a single reactor technology in the early 1980s. They had reactors from multiple different vendors, but wanted to license an existing successful design to produce for themselves and for the export market. One of the major factors in deciding to standardize was to allow them to improve operator training by focusing on one design. Professor Chung stated that one of the key factors in selecting a design from ABB-Combustion Engineering was that he personally knew and had a good relationship with the Chief Technical Officer of ABB-Combustion Engineering going back to a time when Professor Chung had been studying and working in the USA. 73 On their side, ABB-Combustion Engineering were having financial problems and they needed a partner to help further develop their new PWR design. Also they stood to gain revenue from this partnership as well. Based on this relationship, the two sides came to a business agreement and South Korea began producing reactors based on this design, while also continuing to develop and improve it further. 74 Here's an example of a case where the developers of a promising technology decided that they had more to gain by not patenting their technology. Instead they decided to freely share their information in order to get other researchers elsewhere to help to advance the technology so that all could benefit from it. 75 In an interview Wacław Gudowski - Prof. Emeritus, Royal Institute of Technology KTH Stockholm stated that the Soviets and later the Russian were the leaders in lead-bismuth cooled reactors. These reactors use lead-bismuth liquid metal alloy as a coolant. In the 1990s the Russian institute working on commercializing this technology were working with Western partners on nuclear technology in general. They considered patenting this technology, but in the end decided to simply publish it openly. 76 Professor Gudowski had even smuggled $60,000 in cash into Russia to finance the patent application in order to get the Russian institute to publish their technology, but the money was not needed. They based this decision on the judgment that it would take 20 years of R&D before the technology was ready for the commercial market, so they wouldn't see a penny on any patents anyway. They were right on this, as it was another 20 years of R&D in Europe, Russia, China, and Korea before lead-bismuth technology was ready for commercial use. 77 It had already seen use in submarine reactors, but the commercial market demanded a more thoroughly developed technology to satisfy commercial needs. By deciding to not patent the technology, the original developers gained from shared R&D rather than chasing the illusary gains from patent licenses on technology that was not ready for the commercial market anyway. 78 I said that patents were involved in nuclear technology from the very earliest days, and I will now turn to that story. When I say the earliest days, I mean probably earlier than you are imaging. I am talking about before WWII. 79 First though I need to give some background information. France and Britain were working on nuclear weapons from the very earliest days of WWII. In Britain's case this was called Tube Alloys. Canada also was conducting nuclear experiments, including building an "atomic pile", but it's not clear if this had any clear practical goals or was done to understand the physics better. 80 If you read the Wikipedia version of history, it states that Tube Alloys was merged into the Manhattan Project. However, participants have stated in interviews that this was not the case, and the Quebec Agreement which supposedly merged them makes no such mention of any merger of the projects, just the setting up of a board to coordinate efforts between the three countries, that is the US, UK, and Canada. In fact the two projects didn't get along that well, and as we shall see below, a big part of that was disputes over patents. ### 81 The following is based on a paper written by Bertrand Goldschmidt, a French nuclear scientist. Two of his colleagues, Hans Halban and Lew Kowarski played a critical role in early nuclear research. Halban in particular was one of the greatest scientific names in nuclear fission. In March of 1939 Halban conducted an experiment showing that neutrons were emitted by the fissioning of uranium. 82 In April Joliot, Halban, Kowarski and Perrin had a pretty good idea of how to use nuclear fission to produce energy and to make an explosive device and decided to file patents on their invention. Each of the four would receive a 5% share of any benefits and the other 80% would go to the research instittute they worked at in Paris. I will now quote from Goldschmidt's paper. 83 The first two patents concerned energy production and were entitled "Device for energy production" and "Method for stabilizing a device for energy production." They roughly defined the principles of the main components of our present power reactors: moderator in heterogeneous or homogeneous arrangements, cooling fluid, control rods, protection shield. The third patent called "Method for perfecting explosive charges" was less brilliant from a foresight point of view though it proposed valid solutions for the trigger, the tamper, and the rapid obtainment of the critical assembly of a possible explosive device. Finally, nearly a year later, after Alfred Nier's experimental confirmation in March 1940 of Niels Bohr's theoretical prediction that uranium 235, the rare isotope of the mixture in natural uranium, was responsible for fission by slow neutrons, the French took out an additional patent on the advantage of using enriched uranium for the chain reaction. End of quote. 84 In May of 1940, the CNRS, the French research institute in Paris, negotiated an agreement with Belgian mining company Union Miniere, who were the world's biggest producer of uranium, at the time a byproduct of radium mining, about a partnership for the world wide exploitation of these patents. However the agreement was not finalized due to the ongoing events in the war. At the beginning of the war, the French government had approved the development of an energy generator - or a nuclear reactor as we would say today, with the intention of creating an engine for submarines. 85 With the fall of France, Halban and Kowarski travelled to the UK with their supply of heavy water where they were received by their UK counterparts, James Chadwick and John Cockroft. The British were already working on an atomic bomb. In the UK the two conducted an experiment showing that it was possible to create nuclear energy using natural uranium and heavy water. In 1941 the British nuclear project was reorganized and given the name Tube Alloys. In 1942 it was decided to move the work on a plutonium bomb to Canada, and Canada would pay for the project. A lab was set up in Montreal and Halban was put in charge of the project. 86 Halban had negotiated this arrangement by offering to arrange to have the French patents for world wide rights outside of France and the French empire transferred to the UK. In return the French team were to be given a key role in the British nuclear project. The author of the paper I am referencing, Bertrand Goldschmidt, was a section leader in Montreal and a colleague of Halban from France. The Montreal group cooperated with the American Manhattan Project and the two shared information and exchanged visits. 87 However, relations between the two began to break down, with a major cause of this being the Americans being unhappy about the French patents and Halban's arrangement to give the British world wide rights to them. The postwar commercial potential for nuclear power was seen to be huge, and this was a major bone of contention. The extensive participation of ICI (Imperial Chemical Industries) engineers in the Tube Alloys project was also objectionable to the Americans. Presumably this had something to do with potential for ICI being involved in future commercialization of the technology. The American Dupont company, a commercial rival of ICI, was also heavily involved in the American atomic bomb project. The eventual result of this was that the US cut off cooperation with the UK-Canada nuclear project. 88 Finally Halban was forced out of the project at the insistence of the Americans, and he was replaced by John Cockroft who moved to Montreal to take charge of the project. The Americans now restore limited cooperation. Kowarski was put in charge of building a heavy water moderated natural uranium reactor at a new site north of Ottawa at Chalk River. This reactor was turned on on the 5th of September, 1945, three days after Japan's surrender. So in what was supposedly a titanic war for survival, key allies were falling out with respect to their ultimate weapon over issues of patents covering post war commercialization. 89 With the end of the war, the nuclear weapons project in Montreal and Chalk River was wound up. Halban, Kowarski, and Goldschmidt returned to France and Cockroft to the UK where they all played senior roles in the nuclear programs of their respective countries. John Cockroft played an important role in the development of the Magnox reactors which Antoine asked about. The Chalk River Site remains as Canada's main nuclear research centre to this day, and Canada was to continue development of heavy water moderated natural uranium reactors. 90 The first commercial nuclear power plant was commissioned in the UK in 1956, roughly 17 years after the original French nuclear patents. At that time, UK patents had a term of 16 years. While I am not a patent lawyer, it would appear that these patents would likely have expired before nuclear power was ever commercialized. So to answer the question about patents, the first patents on nuclear energy date to before WWII started, and the very first two were about nuclear power plants and it was only the third one which covered nuclear weapons. -------------------- 91 Thanks to other listeners. A number of other listeners made comments saying they were really enjoying the series. I would like to thank the following for their kind words of encouragement. They helped make the work required to do this worthwhile. They are brian-in-ohio mnw Clinton Antoine bjb Kevin O'Brien Trey L'andrew Archer72 Jim DeVore If you have commented but I have forgotten your name, or if the show was recorded before I got a chance to read your comment, I would still like to thank you. 92 Conclusion I would like to thank all the listeners for their kind comments and insightful questions. I hope that I have answered these questions to the satisfaction of everyone. I look forward to hearing from all of you in future podcast episodes including those on other topics. -------------------- Proceedings of the 29th annual conference of the Canadian Nuclear Association and 10th annual conference of the Canadian Nuclear Society. V. 1-3 https://inis.iaea.org/records/m2s41-40917 This has a paper by Bertrand Goldschmidt about the work of the French scientists in Canada. -------------------- Provide feedback on this episode.

The Canadian Investor
7 Stocks We Sold Too Early… And Still Regret

The Canadian Investor

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2026 43:16


In this episode of The Canadian Investor Podcast, we share some of our biggest investing mistakes: stocks we owned, sold too early, and watched soar afterward. From Apple Inc. to Alphabet Inc., Shopify Inc., Brookfield Corporation and more, we break down why we sold, what we learned, and how those experiences shaped our investing philosophy today. We also discuss the emotional side of investing, why patience matters, and how short-term thinking can destroy long-term returns. Plus, we react to Lululemon Athletica Inc. hiring a former Nike, Inc. executive as CEO and whether the selloff could create an opportunity for investors. If you’ve ever sold a stock too soon, this episode is for you. Tickers of stocks discussed: AAPL, GOOGL, SHOP, BN, BIP, BEP, FFH, PWR, LULU, NKE, ATZ, AAPL, OVV Subscribe to our Our New Youtube Channel! Check out our portfolio by going to Jointci.com Our Website Our New Youtube Channel! Canadian Investor Podcast Network Twitter: @cdn_investing Simon’s twitter: @Fiat_Iceberg Braden’s twitter: @BradoCapital Dan’s Twitter: @stocktrades_ca Want to learn more about Real Estate Investing? Check out the Canadian Real Estate Investor Podcast! Apple Podcast - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Spotify - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Web player - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Asset Allocation ETFs | BMO Global Asset Management Sign up for Fiscal.ai for free to get easy access to global stock coverage and powerful AI investing tools. Register for EQ Bank, the seamless digital banking experience with better rates and no nonsense.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Rugby Paper Podcast
England Injury Worries + Ellie Kildunne's Powerful Story | Women's Six Nations

The Rugby Paper Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2026 29:11


In this week's episode of The Rugby Paper Roundup… Assistant Editor Ben Jaycock is joined by journalist Sarah Rendell to break down a huge second round of the Women's Six Nations — with England heading to Murrayfield under mounting selection pressure. After a record-breaking opening weekend that saw over 77,000 fans pack into Twickenham, attention now turns to how the Red Roses respond to a growing injury list. Hannah Botterman and May Campbell are out of the tournament, Alex Matthews misses Scotland through injury, and England had already lost key names including Rosie Galligan, Abbie Ward and captain Zoe Stratford. Yet, despite those setbacks, England continue to call on the depth of talent coming through the PWR — with Delaney Burns and Liz Crake drafted in. We ask whether this is disruption, or a timely test ahead of the World Cup. We also discuss Ellie Kildunne's powerful decision to speak openly about body dysmorphia and the pressures of being one of rugby's most recognisable faces — and what that says about the changing landscape of the women's game. With Kildunne also part of rugby's first ever Twickenham tifo, we explore whether rugby is finally starting to build genuine star power in a team sport that has often struggled to do so. Looking ahead to Round Two, we preview England's trip to Scotland, Wales hosting France at Cardiff Arms Park — boosted by the return of Jasmine Joyce — and Ireland taking on Italy at the Dexcom Stadium after an encouraging showing against England. Beyond the matches, we take a wider look at the growth of the women's game. With the Women's Super League seeing huge attendance figures following the Lionesses' Euros success, why hasn't the PWR seen the same exponential rise? And does the presentation of matches — including TV shots of empty stands — risk holding the game back? Plus, we finish with a quickfire round — from Nando's orders to favourite away days and the best press box food in the game. --- You can subscribe to The Rugby Paper digitally or physically for more great content via this link: https://www.therugbypaper.co.uk/subsc... Follow us across social media for more rugby insight and analysis: X: https://x.com/TheRugbyPaper Facebook: / therugbypaper Instagram: / therugbypaper See you next time on The Rugby Paper Roundup.

Hamin Media Group
Pro Wrasslin' Reflection Episode 199: WRESTLEMANIA VII

Hamin Media Group

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2026 103:25


The PWR is back and for the 1st time in a while.... they go episodic!!!! ONE MORE BEFORE 200 as they relive patriotism from 1991 as the PWR BOYS relive WrestleMania 7 from Los Angeles!!! The similarities to this Mania and today's Mania are strangely similar and the professor calls out the management!!! Discussions also include how social media has splintered patriotism today and it's a little trickier to do it today than it was for 1991!!! Was this the catalyst for the start of the downfall of WWE in the early 90s??? This is a very interesting discussion Reflectionites!  

The Good, The Scaz & The Rugby
England's NEW LOOK: Six Nations Preview!

The Good, The Scaz & The Rugby

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2026 67:25


The Six Nations is BACK and we're breaking it all down  

Rugby on Off The Ball
BRITTANY HOGAN: "I'm so proud of myself" | Sharing her story & a move to the PWR

Rugby on Off The Ball

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2026 28:27


LTW Fancast
Big Tigers Statement and the PWR to Expand? Reaction with Tracey Denny

LTW Fancast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2026 66:53


Wow what a jam-packed episode this is for you, Gloucester-Hartpury fan Tracey Denny dials in to help Jacob digest two big important news. There is the PWR's intention to expand, discussed briefly in last week's episode but all the ramifications are explored in detail in this episode. Furthermore, Tigers Women released a statement saying the club is going to increase some much needed investment into the women's rugby programme, so we critically review that statement and break down some of that LinkedInese jargon to ask... is it as good as it sounds?  Enjoy!

statement expand tigers pwr gloucester hartpury
The Pirate Rugby Podcast
Why Is Rugby Union So Posh? ft. The Rugby History Project

The Pirate Rugby Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2026 67:45


Why Is Rugby Posh? This week I was going by Hattie from The Rugby History Project to answer that very question. We dive into the origins of the sport, its roots in the English private school system, and the role colonialism played in the game's growth across the globe. We then ask the question if women's rugby is any different, before taking a look ahead to the Women's Six Nations. Will it be the Red Roses show again? Furthermore, what has the PWR done that has made both of us so mad? #rugby #history #england #class #socialhistory #podcast #sixnations #money #british Hattie's excellent article: https://therugbyhistoryproject.com/2025/11/03/why-is-rugby-union-posh/ follow me on twitter: https://x.com/HuwGriffinRugby Chapters 0:00 A Rugby Historian 2:55 Rugby Banned Books? 5:40 Its Own Worst Enemy 9:30 William Webb Ellis Never Happened 14:55 Why Is Rugby Posh? 26:25 The North South Divide Explained 32:00 Colonialism And Rugby 36:10 Is Women's Rugby Different? 43:00 Red Roses Thoughts 45:10 PWR Controversy 53:30 Wales Six Nations Preview Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Rugby on Off The Ball
RUGBY DAILY | "Devastating for us and I think for him" | Jacques Nienaber on RG Snyman's injury

Rugby on Off The Ball

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2026 18:23


Welcome along to Tuesday's Rugby Daily, I'm Susanna Mollen.Coming up today we've got news from the Leinster camp as they prepare for their Round of 16 clash with Edinburgh in the Champions Cup on Easter Sunday.The Irish women's team have gathered for their first day of camp in the High Performance Centre.And Irish teams might be set to join the English women's league, the PWR, as they announce plans to expand.Rugby on Off The Ball with Bank Of Ireland | #NeverStopCompetingThe League of Ireland is back this week and you can listen to live commentary of Drogheda United's meeting with Bohemians this Friday from 7 o'clock on Off The Ball on Newstalk and the GoLoud App.Jonathan Higgins will be joined in the gantry by former League of Ireland Premier Division title-winner Vinny Perth.The Champions Cup is back with a bang this week, and we will be at the Aviva Stadium with live commentary this Easter Sunday for Leinster's clash with Edinburgh in the last-16.Kick off is at half-past-5, whilst John Duggan will be in the hot-seat from 1 o'clock on Off The Ball Sunday on Newstalk and the GoLoud App.

Chalked Cast
ROCKET RACING IS DEAD? SSG Regional Champions & Epic Games Layoffs | Chalked Cast #132 w/ Gibbs

Chalked Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2026 107:28


Chalked Cast and chill with Gibbs and the Chalked Squad - Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/chalked-cast/support0:00 - Intro / The Gibbs boxer shorts incident5:10 - So do you sleep shirtless? / Random yappage14:45 - RLCS NA Open 4 Recap 22:27 - GenG Bomb out. Jstn lands on his feet, the end of Rise?33:18 - Spacestation get the job done, Scribblez first event back and thoughts on Diaz?42:15 - MENA SHAKEUP! Twisted Minds and Falcons fall short, R8 win the Regional52:16 - OCE Recap, PWR win the regional and a few "OCE" moments56:23 - EU RLCS Open 4 Preview, Magnifico vs Growlii beef and Alpha54 is back1:09:59 - Team Canada speaks out publicly1:20:48 - Huge Epic Games Layoffs, Rocket Racing is dead, is RLCS the harder esport?1:36:35 - How does the Epic layoffs affect the bot situation and Rocket League?

Evidence To Excellence: News In Neuroplasticity and Rehab
Episode 42: The Evolution of the Concentrated Stroke Rehab Program (CSR) at The Recovery Project

Evidence To Excellence: News In Neuroplasticity and Rehab

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2026 38:57


Host Polly Swingle is joined by team members of the Concentrated Stroke Rehab Program (CSR) to talk about the evolution and effectiveness of the program over the last few years.Elise Thompson, MSOT, OTRL, is an occupational therapist that graduated from Grand Valley State University with a Master's of Occupational Therapy. Soon after graduating, Elise started with TRP and has been here for a year and a half. She has taken part in both the PMP and CSR program in the Livonia clinic. She is passionate about helping individuals with neurological conditions return to what they love doing most.Dr. Kayla Diebold, PT, DPT, CSRS is a Lead Physical Therapist and the Site Coordinator of Clinical Education at The Recovery Project.  She has specialized in the treatment of neurological diseases and disorders since 2017 with special interest in Parkinson's Disease, Stroke, and Vestibular disorders.  She is a Certified Stroke Rehab Specialist and heads the medical programming group for stroke at The Recovery Project. Kayla also has certifications in PWR! and Rock Steady Boxing for the management of Parkinson's Disease. She is a guest lecturer in the Physical Therapist Assistant program at Macomb Community College and frequently presents on topics involving physical therapy management of neurological diseases and disorders across the continuum of care.Learn more about The Recovery Project!View our website at www.therecoveryproject.netCall us 855-877-1944 to become a patientFollow us on InstagramLike us on FacebookThanks for listening! 

Hamin Media Group
Pro Wrestling's Greatest Rivalries: The Brain Busters vs. The Rockers (1988-1989)

Hamin Media Group

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2026 74:45


Before executive producer extraordinaire Big Ray goes on a much-deserved vacation, the PWR wanted him to relax in style, and that's looking back at an untapped potential great rivalry between the Brain Busters and the Rockers from late 1988 to early 1989!!!! How 2 completely different styles made this feud actually steal the shows like in MSG and such!!! Plus, as a pivot, we will fantasy book if these teams were in the NWA or AWA to see if we can generate more money!  

The Canadian Investor
4 Industries AI Can't Replace and Stocks on Our Radar

The Canadian Investor

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2026 38:09


Simon and Dan take a break from the usual AI doom talk to focus on the other side of the trade: industries AI is unlikely to disrupt—and may actually strengthen. They discuss why parts of the “real economy” (natural resources, waste collection, skilled trades, and critical infrastructure work) have durable moats tied to physical assets, regulation, and human accountability. In Stocks on Our Radar, Dan revisits Shopify after a sharp drawdown and explains why AI could be a tailwind through payments and backend infrastructure, even if storefront tools get commoditized. Simon breaks down why he started a position in WSP Global, pointing to its backlog, acquisition strategy, and long runway from grid buildouts and electrification tied to AI-driven energy demand. Tickers discussed: SHOP, WSP.TO, ACM, PWR, BDGI.TO, ARE.TO Subscribe to our Our New Youtube Channel! Check out our portfolio by going to Jointci.com Our Website Our New Youtube Channel! Canadian Investor Podcast Network Twitter: @cdn_investing Simon’s twitter: @Fiat_Iceberg Braden’s twitter: @BradoCapital Dan’s Twitter: @stocktrades_ca Want to learn more about Real Estate Investing? Check out the Canadian Real Estate Investor Podcast! Apple Podcast - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Spotify - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Web player - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Asset Allocation ETFs | BMO Global Asset Management Sign up for Fiscal.ai for free to get easy access to global stock coverage and powerful AI investing tools. Register for EQ Bank, the seamless digital banking experience with better rates and no nonsense. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Hamin Media Group
"What if”… Mr. Perfect Had A Run With The WWF Title!

Hamin Media Group

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2026 72:38


THE PODCAST VERSION WILL ALWAYS BE AVAILABLE EVERY SATURDAY MORING, AT 7AM ON ALL PODCAST PLATFORMS! SEARCH HAMIN MEDIA GROUP @HaminMediaGroup As the professor comes back from edifying the masses, he pondered a question many wrestling fans wondered themselves: what if Mr. Perfect actually became WWE champion? The PWR boys will change the course of wrestling history to right that wrong. Which year would've suited Perfect winning? Which scenario would've solidified a PERFECT title run? A great dissertation on a popular series.

"Your Financial Future" with Nick Colarossi of NJC Investments 02/14/2026

" Your Financial Future" with Nick Colarossi

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2026 59:50


We introduce you to a new ETF that combines AI Companies with Power Generating Companies focused on Data Centers and AI.  We review top REIT ideas for 2026 from Barron's Magazine.  We review the stellar results so far from Earnings Season from FactSet. We also tell you why the PE Ratio on the S&P is falling and why stocks may not be overvalued right now.

Fezcast - The Saracens Supporters Association Podcast
S6E24: The Good, The Bad, The Ugly (again)

Fezcast - The Saracens Supporters Association Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2026 61:15


Want your views heard on the show? Tap here to send us a message!It's an old-school feel to the Fezcast this week, as for the first time in a long time it's a Jez and Matt show! They've got a bonkers Prem Cup defeat, an enormous PWR victory, and an England Six Nations win to sink their teeth into...Follow the Fezcast on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube to hear all our latest news first!Click here for subscription links[Disclaimer: The Fezcast is brought to you on behalf of the Saracens Supporters Association and is not an official product of Saracens Ltd]Title Music (from Season 4): "Herald" by This Winter Machine

Cherry Jam - A Gloucester Rugby Supporter Podcast
Series 7 - Episode 17: Six Nations returns with wins for France, Italy and most importantly England. Glos-Hartpury maintain their 100% Record and Gloucester move their focus to the Prem Cup.

Cherry Jam - A Gloucester Rugby Supporter Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2026 69:12


The first round of the Six Nations saw wins for Italy (in a very wet Rome); France with a thumping win over Ireland and England, who cruised to a very simple victory over Wales. Meanwhile, in game ads are now a thing!? We discuss the matches, the performances and whether the in-game ads really are going to keep Rugby from going behind a paywall.Gloucester-Hartpury continue their 100% record in the PWR after two bonus point wins over Loughborough and Sale. Gloucester shift their focus to the Prem Cup.Ed PriceJim HarleyCherry Jam is proud to be sponsored by PGT LLP

"Your Financial Future" with Nick Colarossi of NJC Investments 02/07/2026

" Your Financial Future" with Nick Colarossi

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2026 59:50


After a down week, the Dow set a new all-time high of 50,000!  We review the market areas working best right now, some will surprise you!  We also review what highly respected Wall Street Advisor Nancy Tengler was buying on the pullbacks last week and review her "Top 6 for 26", her biggest stock convictions for the year.  

Powerful Women Rising
Borrowed Trust: Using Podcasts, Speaking & PR to Grow Your Business w/Emily Aborn and KJ Blattenbauer

Powerful Women Rising

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2026 39:21 Transcription Available


Send us a textYou don't need a bigger audience. You need the right kind of attention.In this episode (the first in our series of interviews with the PWR 2025 Impact Award winners), I'm joined by two brilliant women who know what it takes to build credibility, visibility, and trust without going viral or chasing vanity metrics.Emily Aborn, host of Small Business Casual and PWR Podcast Host of the Year, shares how she creates a real human connection - even when recording a podcast episode alone.KJ Blattenbauer, PWR Speaker of the Year and author of Pitchworthy, shares why depth, intention, and audience advocacy matters more than visibility for visibility's sake.Both of my guests agree that podcasting, speaking, and other forms of PR  are relationship-driven tools that help the right people find you, trust you, and buy from you.We also discuss:Choosing visibility opportunities based on your actual business goalsWhat it really means to read the room — and when to ditch the scriptHow to use podcasts, speaking, and PR to borrow trust instead of chasing attentionSimple, practical tools you can apply immediately, even if visibility scares you a little!Links & References:Learn more about all the 2025 Powerful Women Rising Impact Award winners Connect with other female entrepreneurs inside the PWR Connection NetworkListen to the Small Business Casual podcastFollow Emily on SubstackGet your copy of KJ's new book, PitchworthyFollow KJ on InstagramSupport the showConnect with Your Host!Melissa Snow is a Business Relationship Strategist dedicated to empowering women in entrepreneurship. She founded the Powerful Women Rising Community, which provides female business owners with essential support and resources for business growth. Melissa's other mission is to revolutionize networking, promoting authenticity and genuine connections over sleazy sales tactics. She runs an incredible monthly Virtual Speed Networking Event which you can attend once at no cost using the code FIRSTTIME She lives in Colorado Springs with two dogs, her soul cat Giorgio and any number of foster kittens. She loves iced coffee, Taylor Swift, and Threads.

Hamin Media Group
Pro Wrestling Spotlight: Mr. Anti-Hardcore Cactus Jack (1995)

Hamin Media Group

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2026 85:50


With the debates the IWC is having about safety for a wrestler's career after William Regal's impassioned tweet.... the professor thought to spotlight when a man was frustrated with a seemingly lack of respect from ECW fans for wanting more blood and more violence... hence the Mr. Anti-Hardcore gimmick of Cactus Jack manifested!!! The PWR boys will tap today's debate with yesterday's and talk when is the line crossed between being entertained and literally doing by any means necessary to risk it all!!! Perspectives from a fan and a wrestler make this a really intriguing discussion! BANG BANG!!!  

Ethical & Sustainable Investing News to Profit By!
January 2026 Sustainable Stock and ETF Picks

Ethical & Sustainable Investing News to Profit By!

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2026 24:59


January 2026 Sustainable Stock and ETF Picks… Covers the world's most sustainable companies, cleantech and renewable energy stocks, and more. By Ron Robins, MBA Transcript & Links, Episode 163, January 23, 2026 Hello, Ron Robins here. Welcome to my podcast episode 163, published on January 23, 2025, titled "January 2026 Sustainable Stock and ETF Picks." This podcast is presented by Investing for the Soul. Investingforthesoul.com is your go-to site for vital global, ethical, and sustainable investing mentoring, news, commentary, information, and resources. Remember that you can find a full transcript and links to content, including stock symbols and bonus material, on this episode's podcast page at investingforthesoul.com/podcasts. Also, a reminder. I do not evaluate any of the stocks or funds mentioned in these podcasts, and I don't receive any compensation from anyone covered in these podcasts. Furthermore, I will reveal any investments I have in the investments mentioned herein. I have a huge crop of 24 articles for you in this podcast! Note: Some companies are covered more than once. Now with so many articles to potentially cover, I've chosen 6 to quote from. The other 18 can be found with their titles and links on the webpage for this podcast edition. ------------------------------------------------------------- The 2026 Global 100 list puts speed in the spotlight The first article I'm quoting from is hot off the press and is about one of my favourite company rankings! It's titled The 2026 Global 100 list puts speed in the spotlight on corporateknights.com. The introduction is by Tristan Bronca. Here's some of what he says. "As the global economic transition accelerates, more companies are recognizing that sustainability isn't just good marketing – it's good for business, too… This was the animating spirit of the new methodology behind the Corporate Knights Global 100 ranking. The revised methodology introduces 'sustainable revenue momentum' to measure how fast companies are growing their sustainable revenues. A change of method Last year, sustainable revenues and investments together accounted for 50% of the score, and the other 50% was scored across 22 common environmental, governance and social performance indicators (KPIs) such as water use, emissions, workplace fatalities, and diversity on the board and among executives. The change has reordered the deck in a big way… A dramatic departure? 'In terms of performance, the G100 companies are back in top form, beating the benchmark MSCI AWCI index over the past year,' Toby Heaps says, referring to a stock market index of 85% of global investable equities across almost 50 countries." End quotes. Incidentally, the top five companies are ERG SpA (ERG.MI), Pandora A/S (PNDORA.CO), EDP Renováveis SA (EDP.LS), Fluence Energy, Inc. (FLNC), and Taiwan High Speed Rail Corp. (2633.TW). ------------------------------------------------------------ Top 4 Clean Tech Companies to Watch in 2026 This next article brings us back to highly familiar territory. It's titled Top 4 Clean Tech Companies to Watch in 2026 on carboncredits.com and is by Jennifer L. Here are some brief quotes. "1. NextEra Energy (NEE) is the largest clean energy company in the world. It owns and operates wind farms, solar fields, and battery storage systems across the United States… NextEra has also increased its dividend for more than 26 years in a row. 2. First Solar (FSLR) is one of the top makers of solar panels worldwide. It uses a technology called thin‑film photovoltaic modules. These panels are lighter, use fewer raw materials, and often perform better in hot climates compared to traditional silicon panels. The company builds large solar power plants that send power to utilities and corporate customers… Financially, First Solar is a strong player. Its market cap was around $24 billion in 2025, and it has shown double‑digit revenue growth. 3. Bloom Energy (BE) makes a special type of power generator called a solid‑oxide fuel cell. These units produce electricity efficiently and with low emissions. Customers include data centers, large buildings, and industrial sites that need reliable power without high carbon output. Bloom's fuel cells can run on hydrogen or biogas, which makes them flexible for future clean energy systems… Premium financial news reported that its stock jumped more than 410 % in 2025 after strong earnings results. 4. Plug Power (PLUG) focuses on hydrogen fuel cell systems. Its products are designed to replace traditional batteries and fossil fuels in heavy equipment, forklifts, and industrial vehicles. The company is also building hydrogen production and fueling infrastructure across North America and Europe. This supports a broader 'green hydrogen' economy… Plug Power has faced financial challenges, including consistent net losses and stock price volatility… Its long‑term growth story depends on hydrogen demand and policy support worldwide." End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- 3 ESG Stocks to Add to Your Portfolio for Sustainable Returns in 2026 - December 30, 2025 The third article I've chosen to quote from is titled 3 ESG Stocks to Add to Your Portfolio for Sustainable Returns in 2026 - December 30, 2025 on zacks.com. It's By Aniruddha Ganguly. Now, some quotes from the article. "1. NVIDIA (NVDA) achieved 100% renewable electricity for all its global offices and controlled data centers in fiscal 2025. This Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy) company targets to reduce direct emissions by 50% for operations (Scope 1) and electricity consumption (Scope 2) by 2030… The Zacks Consensus Estimate for fiscal 2026 increased a couple of cents to $4.66 per share, indicating 55.9% growth from the figure reported in fiscal 2025. (NVDA - Free Report). 2. IDEXX Laboratories (IDXX) is a developer, manufacturer and distributor of products and services primarily for the companion animal veterinary, livestock and poultry, water testing and dairy markets. IDEXX has set goals to reduce Scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas emissions and aims to source 100% renewable electricity by 2030… This Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) company plans to improve diversity and representation of underrepresented groups… IDEXX shares have surged 66% in the trailing 12-month period. The Zacks Consensus Estimate for 2026 earnings has been steady at $14.42 per share, indicating 11.7% growth from the 2025 consensus estimate figure of $12.93 per share. (IDXX - Free Report). 3. Microsoft (MSFT) targets to become carbon negative, water positive, and generate zero waste by 2030… This Zacks Rank #3 (Hold) company is leveraging AI for Good Lab and tools like the Microsoft Planetary Computer to drive biodiversity conservation… Microsoft shares have returned 14.7% in a year. The Zacks Consensus Estimate for fiscal 2026 increased a couple of cents to $15.61 per share, indicating 14.4% growth from the figure reported in fiscal 2025. (MSFT - Free Report)." End quotes ------------------------------------------------------------- Top Renewable Energy Stocks To Watch Today This next article picks a few lesser-known, and for some sustainable investors, a few controversial companies for review. It's titled Top Renewable Energy Stocks To Watch Today on marketbeat.com and is by MarketBeat. Here are several brief quotes from the article. "1. Quanta Services (PWR) provides infrastructure solutions for the electric and gas utility, renewable energy, communications, and pipeline and energy industries in the United States, Canada, Australia, and internationally. Read Our Latest Research Report on PWR. 2. WEC Energy Group (WEC) through its subsidiaries, provides regulated natural gas and electricity, and renewable and nonregulated renewable energy services in the United States. It operates through Wisconsin, Illinois, Other States, Electric Transmission, and Non-Utility Energy Infrastructure segments. Read Our Latest Research Report on WEC. 3. NOV (NOV) designs, constructs, manufactures, and sells systems, components, and products for oil and gas drilling and production, and industrial and renewable energy sectors in the United States and internationally. Read Our Latest Research Report on NOV. 4. Clearway Energy (CWEN) operates in the renewable energy business in the United States. The company operates through Conventional and Renewables segments. Read Our Latest Research Report on CWEN. 5. HA Sustainable Infrastructure Capital (HASI) through its subsidiaries, engages in the investment of energy efficiency, renewable energy, and sustainable infrastructure markets in the United States. Read Our Latest Research Report on HASI. 6. Ameresco (AMRC) a clean technology integrator, provides a portfolio of energy efficiency and renewable energy supply solutions in the United States, Canada, Europe, and internationally. Read Our Latest Research Report on AMRC. 7. Gibraltar Industries (ROCK) manufactures and provides products and services for the renewable energy, residential, agtech, and infrastructure markets in the United States and internationally. Read Our Latest Research Report on ROCK." End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- Top Wind Energy Stocks Poised to Benefit From Clean Energy Transition My fifth article is titled Top Wind Energy Stocks Poised to Benefit From Clean Energy Transition on finance.yahoo.com. It's by Avisekh Bhattacharjee and originally published on zacks.com. In the US, the wind industry could be gaining ground despite President Trump's protestations. Here are some quotes from the article. "1. NextEra Energy (NEE) is a public utility holding company engaged in the generation, transmission, distribution and sale of electric energy. The Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) company's competitive energy business, NextEra Energy Resources LLC (NEER), is the leading generator of wind energy globally. NextEra Energy, Inc. (NEE): Free Stock Analysis Report. 2. PG&E (PCG) operates as the parent holding company of California's largest regulated electric and gas utility, Pacific Gas and Electric Company.  The Zacks Rank #2 company's exposure in wind energy stems from the procurement of power from several renewable resources. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (PCG): Free Stock Analysis Report. 3. Arcosa (ACA) is a leading manufacturer of infrastructure-related products and services that serve the energy, construction and transportation markets. This Zacks Rank #2 company's Engineered Structures business continues to benefit from strong demand for its wind towers and engineered structures. Arcosa, Inc. (ACA): Free Stock Analysis Report. 4. Constellation Energy (CEG) is a well-recognised provider of electric power, natural gas and energy management services to 2 million customers across the continental United States. Constellation Energy operates 27 wind projects across 10 states… This Zacks Rank #3 (Hold) company is launching a $350 million initiative to increase the output and lifespan of its portfolio of renewable energy sources. Constellation Energy Corporation (CEG): Free Stock Analysis Report." End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- AI infrastructure stocks Lumentum, Celestica, Seagate beat Nvidia 2025 My final review article covers some old favourites. Its title is AI infrastructure stocks Lumentum, Celestica, Seagate beat Nvidia 2025 on cnbc.com. It's by Kif Leswing. Here are some brief quotes. 1. Nvidia has been the biggest infrastructure winner in the artificial intelligence boom, soaring in value by almost thirteenfold since the end of 2022 to a market cap of $4.6 trillion. 2. Lumentum based in San Jose, California, makes switches, transceivers and other optical laser-based parts that are needed for fiber-optic cables. Customers have typically been telecommunications carriers and device makers like Apple, which previously used Lumentum parts in its FaceID sensor… Lumentum's stock price has jumped 372% this year… lifting the company's market cap past $28 billion. Sales surged 58% in the most recent quarter from a year earlier to $533 million.  3. Western Digital is one of three major hard drive manufacturers, along with Seagate and Toshiba. Shares of the 55-year-old company are up almost 300% this year… 'Data is the fuel that powers AI, and it is HDDs that provide the most reliable, scalable and cost-effective data storage solution,' CEO Irving Tan said in October on an earnings call… Revenue is expected to increase about 23% in fiscal 2026, with growth slowing to 13% in 2027. 4. Micron is one of three major memory producers, alongside Samsung and SK Hynix, but the only one based in the U.S… Analysts from Morgan Stanley said in a December note that Micron's results showed the best revenue and profit upside in the 'history of the U.S. semis industry' — aside from Nvidia. Revenue is expected to almost double in the year ending in August, before dramatically slowing to 24% in fiscal 2027 and less than 1% in 2028, according to LSEG. 5. Seagate is also benefiting from booming demand for storage. The stock is up 231% this year. Sales rose 21% to $2.63 billion in the company's fiscal third quarter, which ended Oct. 3. The company said at the time that 80% of its sales go to the data center market. 'There is no question that AI is reshaping hard drive demand by elevating the economic value of data and data storage,' CEO Dave Mosley said on a call with analysts… Analysts expect 21% revenue growth this fiscal year, followed by increases of about 15% and 6% in the next two years, according to LSEG. 6. Celestica founded in 1994 as an IBM subsidiary, makes switches that connect networks together and manage the data and traffic flowing through them. The stock is up more than 230% this year… Analysts at Goldman Sachs wrote in a note Friday that Celestica supplies parts for Google's ASIC. 'The company should benefit in 2026 from being the leading provider of Google TPU rack level solutions,' the analysts wrote." End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- More articles from around the world with Sustainable Investment Picks for January 2026. 1. Title: These Infrastructure Stocks Could Quietly Power the AI Revolution on fool.com. By Matt DiLallo. 2. Title: Top Beaten-Down Data Center Infrastructure Stocks on seekingalpha.com. By Steven Cress. 3. Title: Meet the four most sustainable funds on the market for 2025 corporateknights.com. By CK Staff. 4. Title: 3 Green Energy Stocks to Watch for a Cleaner, More Sustainable 2026 on finance.yahoo.com. By Pulkit Chamria. 5. Title: Analysts See Triple-Digit Revenue Growth in 2026 for These 3 AI Infrastructure Stocks on wallst.com. By Rich Duprey. 6. Title: The Top Clean-Energy Stocks for 2026, According to an Investment Advisor on businessinsider.com. By Samuel O'Brient. 7. Title: Top 10 Companies for CSR and Sustainability in 2025 on thecsrjournal.in. By Hency Thacker. 8. Title: This Underrated Industrial Stock Could Be the Purest Play on AI Infrastructure on fool.com. By John Bromels. 9. Title: Sustainable Investing Trends to Watch in 2026 on sustainalytics.com. By Morningstar Sustainalytics. 10. Title: The most sustainable equity funds in 2026 on corporateknights.com. Introduction by Saint Ekpali. 11. Title: Top 10: Renewable Energy Companies on energydigital.com. By Charlie King. 12. Title: The Grid Gap Gamble: Why Bloom Energy is Defying the Clean Tech Downturn in 2026 on markets.financialcontent.com. By MarketMinute. 13. Title: Some of the Best Sustainable Companies Call This ETF Home on etftrends.com. By Todd Shriber. 14. Title: Cisco Systems a Top Socially Responsible Dividend Stock With 2.2% Yield (CSCO) on nasdaa.com. By BNK Invest. 15. Title: Top 10: Sustainable Investments 2026 on sustainabilitymag.com. By Charlie King. 16. Title: Why Bloom Energy (BE) Stock Is Trading Up Today on finance.yahoo.com. By Petr Huřťák. 17. Title: Barclays Calls This 1 AI Server Stock 'Best in Class' Amid Upgrade to 'Overweight' Rating on finance.yahoo.com. By Aditya Raghunath. 18. Title: A clean technology company on the verge of transformational growth on stockhouse.com. By Trevor Abes. ------------------------------------------------------------- Ending Comment These are my top news stories with their stock and fund tips for this podcast, "January 2026 Sustainable Stock and ETF Picks." Please click the like and subscribe buttons wherever you download or listen to this podcast. That helps bring these podcasts to others like you. And please click the share buttons to share this podcast with your friends and family. Let's promote ethical and sustainable investing as a force for hope and prosperity in these tumultuous times! Contact me if you have any questions. Thank you for listening. My next podcast will be on February 27th. See you then. Bye for now.   © 2026 Ron Robins, Investing for the Soul

"Your Financial Future" with Nick Colarossi of NJC Investments 01/17/2026

" Your Financial Future" with Nick Colarossi

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2026 59:50


We give you some top investment picks right now to kick off your investing year 2026 including top Data Center Stocks and ETFs, Top Defense and Aerospace Stocks and ETFs, and Top Data Center and Storage Stocks and ETFs.  We also review the surprising leading sectors of the S&P 500 to start the year.

Hamin Media Group
Pro Wrestling Spotlight: Greatest Heel Turns - DIESEL

Hamin Media Group

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2025 83:25


THE PODCAST VERSION WILL ALWAYS BE AVAILABLE EVERY SATURDAY MORING, AT 7AM ON ALL PODCAST PLATFORMS! SEARCH HAMIN MEDIA GROUP @HaminMediaGroup   It's almost the end of 2025, and the PWR boys are spotlighting possibly one of the infamous heel turns that might have sparked a particular “Attitude Era” way before Stone Cold himself!!! The boys talk about when Big Daddy Cool Diesel turned on the fans after Bret Hart regained the WWF Championship at the 1995 Survivor Series!!! The boys will analyze how this turned out and showed how Vince might have had to admit that what worked in the 80s , in hindsight, wouldn't work in the 90s!!! They will delve into a great work shoot promo that literally showed the "real" Kevin Nash on WWE tv!!! Great discussion on both ends!!!  

2020 Politics War Room
340: Winning Back The Youth Vote with John Della Volpe

2020 Politics War Room

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2025 85:34


James and Al celebrate the generational win in the Miami mayoral race, explain Trump's rapid decline in popularity, and sound the alarm over corporate and foreign influence in entertainment and the broader economy.  Then they welcome polling legend John Della Volpe to discuss his findings from the Harvard Youth Poll, which shows that young people are increasingly disillusioned with politics, losing faith in capitalism, and fear for their futures in the age of AI.  Critically, they emphasize the need to re-engage these voters, give them hope, and get them to the polls. Email your questions to James and Al at politicswarroom@gmail.com or tweet them to @politicon.  Make sure to include your city– we love to hear where you're from! More from James and Al: Get text updates from Politics War Room and Politicon. Watch Politics War Room & James Carville Explains on YouTube @PoliticsWarRoomOfficial James Carville & Al Hunt have launched the Politics War Room Substack Get updates and some great behind-the-scenes content from the documentary CARVILLE: WINNING IS EVERYTHING, STUPID by following James on X @jamescarville and his new TikTok @realjamescarville Get More From This Week's Guest:  John Della Volpe: Twitter | Harvard Institute of Politics | Website | Social Sphere | Substack | Author of “Fight” Please Support Our Sponsors: Miracle Made: Upgrade your sleep with Miracle Made! Go to TryMiracle.com/warroom and use the code WARROOM to claim your FREE 3-PIECE TOWEL SET and SAVE over 40% OFF. Superpower: This holiday, give your loved ones the only gift that keeps on giving — health. Go to Superpower.com/gift to get a free $49 gift box with your gifted membership. Zbiotics: Go to https://zbiotics.com/PWR and use PWR at checkout for 15% off any first-time orders of ZBiotics probiotics. Webroot: Protect yourself and your family from cybercrime this holiday season with 75% off Webroot Total Protection at webroot.com/WARROOM

Rugby on Off The Ball
Rugby Daily | Is kicking ruining rugby? Wafer in line for Quins debut!

Rugby on Off The Ball

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2025 12:52


Welcome to Wednesday's Rugby Daily, with Cameron Hill,Coming up today, we hear from Jack Conan ahead of Leinster's Investec Champions Cup clash away to Leicester Tigers,Is rugby being ruined by the recent increase of kicking in the game?And Aoife Wafer is in line to make her debut for PWR side Harlequins this weekend.Rugby on Off The Ball with Bank of Ireland | #NeverStopCompeting

Powerful Women Rising
SEO Made Simple: How to Grow Website Traffic (Without the Tech Overwhelm) w/Kelly Kumler

Powerful Women Rising

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2025 24:10 Transcription Available


Send us a textSEO doesn't have to be overwhelming or expensive to actually work.In this episode, I'm joined by Kelly Kumler, a brand and web designer with a serious love for SEO, to demystify what it really takes to get aligned, organic traffic to your site (without keyword stuffing or obsessing over trends).Whether you've been guessing at keywords, blogging at random, or hoping your pretty website will magically rank, Kelly breaks down a clear, human-first approach to search engine optimization that supports your business goals and helps the right people find you.We talk about:How to choose keywords that are actually winnable (and what tools to use) and the page structure both Google and humans love Why your site needs dedicated service pages and how they help with search engine optimizationHow AI tools have changed the game for SEOWhat to DIY vs. outsource and when to make the switchThis episode is your invitation to stop relying pretending SEO doens't exist and start building a simple, sustainable strategy that will pay off over time.Links & References:For faster business growth through networking, strategy and accountability, check out the  Powerful Women Rising Business Growth Community!Kelly is offering FREE website evaluations for PWR podcast listeners!  Snag your spot HERE!Learn more about Kelly at www.kellyryann.com or connect with her on Instagram!Support the showConnect with Your Host!Melissa Snow is a Business Relationship Strategist dedicated to empowering women in entrepreneurship. She founded the Powerful Women Rising Community, which provides female business owners with essential support and resources for business growth. Melissa's other mission is to revolutionize networking, promoting authenticity and genuine connections over sleazy sales tactics. She runs an incredible monthly Virtual Speed Networking Event which you can attend once at no cost using the code FIRSTTIME She lives in Colorado Springs with two dogs, her soul cat Giorgio and any number of foster kittens. She loves iced coffee, Taylor Swift, and Threads.

Mad at the Internet
Virtue is its Own Reward, I Guess?

Mad at the Internet

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2025 247:18


Roy Philipose objects to having made himself my slave voluntarily, Old Bay retvrns, Tim Waltz is a retard, YouTube can ignore federal courts, Dong Long Gone gives up, PWR meets a girl, Riley and Mint break up, Linus and Styx join the forum.

Evidence To Excellence: News In Neuroplasticity and Rehab
Episode 38: The Benefits of Occupational Therapy for those with Parkinson's Disease

Evidence To Excellence: News In Neuroplasticity and Rehab

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2025 46:39


Host Polly Swingle is joined by Paige Boll, COTA/L, to talk about the latest research and evidence relating to Parkinson's Disease. Topics discussed include the latest statistics in the United States, emerging research on risk factors, and the benefits of having an Occupational Therapist as a part of your care team.Paige Boll, COTA/L, earned her Bachelor in Health Science with a concentration in Exercises Science at Oakland University (2018) and then went on to get her Certificate as an Occupational Therapy Assistant at Macomb Community College (2020). She joined The Recovery Project as a Rehab Tech in 2016 and had the ability to work through school before transitioning to a COTA in 2020. Paige is certified in PWR! and is a Rock Steady Boxing Coach. You can find her teaching some of TRP's Rock Steady Boxing classes in the Clinton Township location. Paige also plays an important role in the POPP (Power Over Parkinson's Program) serving as an OT provider.Learn more about The Recovery Project! View our website at www.therecoveryproject.net Call us 855-877-1944 to become a patient Follow us on Instagram Like us on Facebook Thanks for listening!

InvestTalk
Gold or Bitcoin? The New Safe-Haven Showdown

InvestTalk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2025 45:24 Transcription Available


We will examine the case for gold and bitcoin as alternative assets, and look at how each fits (or doesn't) into a diversified portfolio, and what type of investor each one is really built for.Today's Stocks & Topics: Fidelity MSCI Real Estate Index ETF (FREL), Quanta Services, Inc. (PWR), Market Wrap, “Gold or Bitcoin? The New Safe-Haven Showdown”, Vanguard Total World Stock Index Fund ETF Shares (VT), The Scotts Miracle-Gro Company (SMG), Blue Owl, CD Rates, American Electric Power Company, Inc. (AEP), Vistra Corp. (VST), NextEra Energy, Inc. (NEE), PayPal Holdings, Inc. (PYPL), Teradyne, Inc. (TER), Bonds.Our Sponsors:* Check out Incogni: https://incogni.com/investtalk* Check out Invest529: https://www.invest529.com* Check out NordProtect: https://nordprotect.com/investalk* Check out Progressive: https://www.progressive.com* Check out Quince: https://quince.com/INVEST* Check out TruDiagnostic and use my code INVEST for a great deal: https://www.trudiagnostic.comAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

in the LOOP Breakaway Roping Podcast
#246 - Linsay Rosser- Sumpter | PWR: Women's Rodeo Reimagined

in the LOOP Breakaway Roping Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2025 44:01


In this episode, I sit down with one of my favorite people on the planet — Linsay Rosser-Sumpter — lifelong cowgirl, powerhouse leader, and one of the driving forces behind Premier Women's Rodeo (PWR).Linsay and I go way back to our Colorado days, long hauls in the truck, and all the miles and memories that shaped who we are today. But this conversation digs even deeper. Lindsay opens up about the evolution of women's rodeo, why change was necessary, and the mission she and Sammy Jo Smith have carried forward: creating a platform where every cowgirl — pros, challengers, limited, moms, beginners, and veterans — has an honest shot at opportunity.She breaks down why PWR matters, how it came to be, and what it means to build a system that finally treats female rodeo athletes with the respect, visibility, and payout they deserve. From the magic of the back-number gala to 2.4 million CBS network viewers watching women compete on a global stage, Linsay lays out how this movement is shifting the culture — not just inside the arena, but industry-wide.We talk motherhood, identity, leadership, fairness, and the responsibility to leave rodeo better than we found it. Linsay shares her heart for the next generation — including her own boys — and why she refuses to let the old way of doing things define the future for cowgirls.This conversation is heartfelt, fiery, and full of the passion that makes Lindsay who she is — an advocate, a visionary, and the kind of cowgirl who doesn't just talk about change… she builds it.

2020 Politics War Room
336: Duty, Honor, Country with Brigadier General Ty Seidule (Ret.)

2020 Politics War Room

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2025 41:56


James and Al celebrate the reopening of the government and applaud those willing to cross the line, while still criticizing the administration's failure to achieve a better outcome for the American people.  Then, Politics War Room welcomes Brigadier General Ty Seidule (Ret.) to discuss our military heroes, the renaming of our bases to reflect those loyal to our country rather than those who fought under the Confederacy, and how we can live up to our national values after the Trump era comes to an end.  They also skewer the tenure of Pete Hegseth, honor our veterans, and remember those who lost their lives in the course of their service. Email your questions to James and Al at politicswarroom@gmail.com or tweet them to @politicon.  Make sure to include your city– we love to hear where you're from! More from James and Al: Get text updates from Politics War Room and Politicon. Watch Politics War Room & James Carville Explains on YouTube @PoliticsWarRoomOfficial James Carville & Al Hunt have launched the Politics War Room Substack Get updates and some great behind-the-scenes content from the documentary CARVILLE: WINNING IS EVERYTHING, STUPID by following James on X @jamescarville and his new TikTok @realjamescarville Get More From This Week's Guest:  Brigadier General Ty Seidule (Ret.): Twitter | West Point | Website | Hamilton College | New America | Author Please Support Our Sponsors: Zbiotics: Go to https://zbiotics.com/PWR and use PWR at checkout for 15% off any first-time orders of ZBiotics probiotics. Miracle Made: Upgrade your sleep with Miracle Made! Go to TryMiracle.com/warroom and use the code WARROOM to claim your FREE 3-PIECE TOWEL SET and SAVE over 40% OFF.

The Canadian Investor
50 Ways to Invest in the AI Revolution - Part 2

The Canadian Investor

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2025 41:16


Simon and Dan return with the second half of their deep dive into 50 Ways to Invest in the AI Revolution. While Part 1 covered the obvious giants—semiconductors, hyperscalers, pure-play AI software, enterprise apps, and data center REITs—this episode looks at some of the less obvious but equally important beneficiaries of AI. From utilities and grid infrastructure to commodities like uranium, copper, and natural gas, they explore the backbone powering AI’s massive energy demand. They also dig into healthcare, cybersecurity, IT consulting, and industrial automation—sectors where AI is already improving efficiency, margins, and innovation in ways most investors overlook. Once again, they highlight dozens of companies and ETFs across these subsectors, balancing both the opportunities and the risks. If you’re wondering how to get diversified AI exposure beyond the usual suspects like NVDA and MSFT, this episode is packed with fresh angles and ticker ideas. Tickers discussed: Utilities & infrastructure: NEE, CNP, D, CPX.TO, BEPC, BIP.UN.TO, PWR, MTZ, SU, ENB Commodities & energy: TECK.B.TO, TOU.TO, URA, U.UN.TO, UNG, ZEO.TO, BCIM Healthcare: GEHC, SMMNY, PFE, ISRG, WELL.TO, ZHQ.TO Cybersecurity: CRWD, PANW, HAK, CYBR.TOConsulting & IT services: ACN, IBM, INFY Industrial automation: ROK, ABB, PNG.V Check out our portfolio by going to Jointci.com Our Website Our New Youtube Channel! Canadian Investor Podcast Network Twitter: @cdn_investing Simon’s twitter: @Fiat_Iceberg Braden’s twitter: @BradoCapital Dan’s Twitter: @stocktrades_ca Want to learn more about Real Estate Investing? Check out the Canadian Real Estate Investor Podcast! Apple Podcast - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Spotify - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Web player - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Asset Allocation ETFs | BMO Global Asset Management Sign up for Fiscal.ai for free to get easy access to global stock coverage and powerful AI investing tools. Register for EQ Bank, the seamless digital banking experience with better rates and no nonsense. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

2020 Politics War Room
327: The World's Worst Bet with David J. Lynch

2020 Politics War Room

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2025 89:10


James and Al dissect the potential of a government shutdown, weigh its political effects on our economy and politics, and call out the partisanship of the SCOTUS in the wake of Trump's multiple appointees.  Then, they welcome WaPo's David Lynch to break down the pernicious effects of globalization, why it was a good idea, and why it is currently failing our people.  They also explore possible solutions to the decline of manufacturing, emphasize the importance of job training, and look at the role that a new government led by the Democratic Party could pursue to restore hope and jobs while strengthening our international relationships. This episode was recorded before the events at Utah Valley University. Email your questions to James and Al at politicswarroom@gmail.com or tweet them to @politicon.  Make sure to include your city– we love to hear where you're from! Watch Politics War Room & James Carville Explains on YouTube @PoliticsWarRoomOfficial  More from James and Al: Get text updates from Politics War Room and Politicon. Watch Politics War Room & James Carville Explains on YouTube @PoliticsWarRoomOfficial James Carville & Al Hunt have launched the Politics War Room Substack Get updates and some great behind-the-scenes content from the documentary CARVILLE: WINNING IS EVERYTHING, STUPID by following James on X @jamescarville and his new TikTok @realjamescarville Check Out Andrew Zucker's New Politicon Podcast: The Golden Age Get More From This Week's Guest:  David J. Lynch: Twitter | WaPo | National Press Foundation | Author  Please Support Our Sponsors: Naked Wines: To get 6 bottles of wine for $39.99, head to nakedwines.com/warroom and use code WARROOM for both the code and password.  Zbiotics: Get back into action after a night out with 15% off your first order of Zbiotics when you go to zbiotics.com/pwr and use code: PWR

2020 Politics War Room
321: The Epstein Conspiracy with Judd Legum

2020 Politics War Room

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2025 60:29


James and Al emphasize the need to wield the terrible effects of Trump's ‘Big Beautiful Bill' against Republicans going forward, as well as the benefits of focusing on the economic peril of everyday Americans going into the midterms.  Then, they welcome thought-leader Judd Legum to look at the continuing appeal of MAGA, Trump's connection to Epstein, his grifts, and if he'll be held to account.  They also break down the massive grifts that the administration is running on the country and its followers and explore the role that journalists play in holding them to account. Email your questions to James and Al at politicswarroom@gmail.com or tweet them to @politicon.  Make sure to include your city– we love to hear where you're from! Watch Politics War Room & James Carville Explains on YouTube @PoliticsWarRoomOfficial  More from James and Al: Get text updates from Politics War Room and Politicon. Watch Politics War Room & James Carville Explains on YouTube @PoliticsWarRoomOfficial James Carville & Al Hunt have launched the Politics War Room Substack Get updates and some great behind-the-scenes content from the documentary CARVILLE: WINNING IS EVERYTHING, STUPID by following James on X @jamescarville and his new TikTok @realjamescarville Check Out Andrew Zucker's New Politicon Podcast: The Golden Age Check Out Kimberly Atkins Stohr's New Politicon Podcast: Justice By Design Get More From This Week's Guest:  Judd Legum: Twitter | Popular Information Substack | BlueSky | Threads Please Support Our Sponsors: Smalls: For a limited time only– get 60% off your first order PLUS free shipping when you head to Smalls.com/warroom Royo: Go to eatroyo.com and use our promo code PWR for 20% OFF!

2020 Politics War Room
317: How Democrats Lost America with Josh Dawsey

2020 Politics War Room

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2025 77:40


VOTE FOR THE WORST OF THE TRUMP ADMIN James and Al exciorate the Republican controlled government for passing Trump's insane budget, tear into the lackeys supporting the regime, and call upon you to vote in the attached survey to decide who is truly the worst of the worst in the Trump era.  Then, they welcome Josh Dawsey from the WSJ and author of “2024: How Trump Retook the White House and the Democrats Lost America” for a deep dive into the inner machinations of a Democratic party that seemed to be willing to keep Biden in power at all costs.  What will it take to protect the party from its worst impulses as it picks a candidate going into 2028? Email your questions to James and Al at politicswarroom@gmail.com or tweet them to @politicon.  Make sure to include your city– we love to hear where you're from! Watch Politics War Room & James Carville Explains on YouTube @PoliticsWarRoomOfficial  More from James and Al: Get text updates from Politics War Room and Politicon. Watch Politics War Room & James Carville Explains on YouTube @PoliticsWarRoomOfficial Get updates and some great behind-the-scenes content from the documentary CARVILLE: WINNING IS EVERYTHING, STUPID by following James on X @jamescarville and his new TikTok @realjamescarville James Carville & Al Hunt have launched the Politics War Room Substack Check Out Andrew Zucker's New Politicon Podcast: The Golden Age Check Out Kimberly Atkins Stohr's New Politicon Podcast: Justice By Design Get More From This Week's Guests:  Josh Dawsey: X | WSJ | AJI Fellowships | WaPo | Author Please Support Our Sponsors: Beam: Sleep better with Beam's best-selling Dream Powder and get up to 40% off for a limited time when you go to shopbeam.com/warroom and use code: WARROOM Zbiotics: Get back into action after a night out with 15% off your first order of Zbiotics when you go to zbiotics.com/pwr and use code: PWR Royo: Go to eatroyo.com and use our promo code PWR for 20% OFF!