Podcasts about Sarp

Commune in Occitanie, France

  • 93PODCASTS
  • 268EPISODES
  • 43mAVG DURATION
  • 1WEEKLY EPISODE
  • Jun 2, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

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Best podcasts about Sarp

Latest podcast episodes about Sarp

Art Destinations
Ep 2: Alfio Puglisi on how SARP is transforming Sicily into a global hub for contemporary art

Art Destinations

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2025 36:24


Alfio Puglisi in conversation with podcast host Sarah Rhodes on how the Sicily Artist in Residence Program (SARP) is transforming Sicily into a global hub for contemporary art through site-specific residencies, local collaboration, and atmospheric place-making. In this wide-ranging conversation, Sarah Rhodes speaks with the podcast's co-producer Alfio Puglisi — founder of the Sicily Artist in Residence Program (SARP) — about returning to his ancestral home on the slopes of Mount Etna to forge a new vision for contemporary art in Sicily. Alfio shares his remarkable journey: from studying economics and the digital economy and society at King's College London to teaching in Lisbon, and ultimately leaving behind a secure academic career to pursue something more entrepreneurial and creatively rooted. That shift led him back to Linguaglossa, where he transformed his family's 17th-century palazzo into a living museum, restaurant, contemporary gallery and residency program. Through SARP, Alfio brings together international and local artists, offering them space, support, and time to develop site-responsive work. The program emphasises collaboration with local artisans, curators, and Sicilian production facilities, ensuring that exhibitions are deeply embedded in place. These are not parachute residencies, but long-form engagements that invite artists to slow down, adapt, and attune to Sicily's layered histories and landscapes. Together, they discuss: The personal and political significance of returning home to begin again Why Sicily's “peripheral” location may actually be a place of focus and clarity for artists The interplay between cultural memory, atmospheric conditions, and contemporary creative practice The red Saharan rain that settles each spring on Sicilian gardens — and how this meteorological phenomenon became the digital pigment for new photographic work by Andre Hemer How Alfio's vision for SARP builds on both inherited history and future-facing cultural networks The growing community of creatives — many returning from cities like London, Paris, and Berlin — who are reshaping Sicily's role in the international art conversation This episode offers a meditation on place, return and reinvention. As Alfio says, Sicily's position at the centre of the Mediterranean offers not just geography, but perspective — a place to think, to feel, and to make without distraction. Listen in as we reflect on the links between atmosphere and art-making, the value of community and continuity, and how peripheral places can become sites of deep cultural transformation.          

Urbcast - a podcast about cities (podcast o miastach)
226: Reistnienie budynków: nowa era w budownictwie? | Marta Promińska & Agnieszka Kalinowska Sołtys

Urbcast - a podcast about cities (podcast o miastach)

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2025 43:40


Endüstri Radyo
Selin Refik – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2025 40:07


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Özaltın Holding CFO'su Selin Refik konuk oldu.

Art Destinations
Ep 1: Sicily season premiere

Art Destinations

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2025 8:31


In this premiere episode of Art Destinations Sicily, we introduce the artists and key themes that will be explored in season. We look at how artists engage with the layered geographies of Sicily — a place shaped by ancient myths, volcanic terrain, and a complex cultural inheritance. Through residencies and site-responsive projects, the artists featured in this season reveal how creative practice emerges from deep entanglements with land, memory, and material. Our conversations begin with this podcast's co-producer and Sicily Artist-in Residence Program (SARP) director Alfio Puglisi. And then we have the privilege of meeting Elisa Giardina Papa (Italy's Venice Biennale 2022 artist), Vito Planeta (Planeta Wines), Irene Coppola (artist and Spaziomateria, Palermo), Francesco Vullo (artist), Claudio Gulli (art historian, Palazzo Butero, Palermo), Hanna Burkart (artist), Aurora Passero (artist) and Alessandro Giorgi (artist).   The key ideas are: Collaborating with Place The Sicilian landscape—particularly Mount Etna—acts not merely as a backdrop but as an active force shaping artistic practice. Across episodes, artists respond to the island's geology, climate, and topography as both medium and subject.   Reimagining Cultural Identity Artists explore Sicily's layered histories, myths, and social taboos to question and reframe local identity. Folklore, symbolism, and personal narratives are reinterpreted through contemporary lenses to address belonging, memory, and transformation.   3. A Return to Materiality There is a strong return to material practices—textiles, volcanic rock, pigment, and site-specific installation—as a way to connect past and present. This material sensibility serves as a tactile bridge between tradition and experimentation.   4. Peripheral Networks and Global Dialogue Sicily's perceived peripherality fosters a fertile ground for international collaboration. Through residencies and projects like SARP, artists from diverse backgrounds engage with the island to generate new models of exchange, intimacy, and creative dwelling.   The Sicily season reveals that working from the edge — whether spatially or culturally — creates rich opportunities to rethink place, practice, and belonging. Artists in this season treat the island not only as a site, but as a way of being. We hope you enjoy this season of Art Destinations Sicily. Each episode is released fortnightly. Subscribe to our newsletter, follow us on your preferred listening platform. such as Apple Podcasts or Spotify, and explore the visual works of our guests via @artdestinations.podcast on Instagram.

12-kaffen
- DET ER HELT UAKTUELT!

12-kaffen

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2025 68:32


Jada! Vi skulle prøve å snu negativitetsskuta litt, men jaggu klarte ikke Kamma å ødelegge det, midt i episoden! Vi går gjennom Sarp, backproblematikken, 16.mai og ikke minst den udugelig avgjørelsen om å prøve å selge "Briskeby"! Hør hør, men viktigst av alt meld deg inn i klubben NÅ!

Endüstri Radyo
Buğra Esen - Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2025 42:59


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Gayrimenkul Değerleme Uzmanı Buğra Esen konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Buğra Esen - Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2025 42:59


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Gayrimenkul Değerleme Uzmanı Buğra Esen konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Prof. Dr. Ayben Koy– Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2025 39:21


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Koy Business Eğitim Danışmanlık ve Teknoloji Ltd Şti. Kurucu Ortak Prof. Dr. Ayben Koy konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Prof. Dr. Ayben Koy– Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2025 39:21


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Koy Business Eğitim Danışmanlık ve Teknoloji Ltd Şti. Kurucu Ortak Prof. Dr. Ayben Koy konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
İsmail Tekbaş & Ali Kayacı – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2025 39:29


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına SMMM/Yazar İsmail Tekbaş ve Bağımsız Denetçi Mali Müşavir Ali Kayacı konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
İsmail Tekbaş & Ali Kayacı – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2025 39:29


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına SMMM/Yazar İsmail Tekbaş ve Bağımsız Denetçi Mali Müşavir Ali Kayacı konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Koray Öztopçu – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2025 42:21


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Garanti BBVA Tüketici Finansmanı Direktörü Koray Öztopçu konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Koray Öztopçu – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2025 42:21


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Garanti BBVA Tüketici Finansmanı Direktörü Koray Öztopçu konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Doç. Dr. Filiz Eryılmaz – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2025 47:08


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına ALB Başekonomisti Doç. Dr. Filiz Eryılmaz konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Doç. Dr. Filiz Eryılmaz – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2025 47:08


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına ALB Başekonomisti Doç. Dr. Filiz Eryılmaz konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Orkide Ercüment – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2025 46:14


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Aloha Dijital Bilişim Eğitim ve Danışmanlık A.Ş. Kurucusu Orkide Ercüment konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Orkide Ercüment – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2025 46:14


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Aloha Dijital Bilişim Eğitim ve Danışmanlık A.Ş. Kurucusu Orkide Ercüment konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Duygu Akdemirbey – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2025 44:04


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına HDA Grup Yönetim K.B Duygu Akdemirbey konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Duygu Akdemirbey – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2025 44:04


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına HDA Grup Yönetim K.B Duygu Akdemirbey konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Burcu Kösem – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2025 45:31


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Türk Kızılay İstanbul İl Başkanı, TABA-AmCham Yüksek İstişare Kur. Üyesi, Dışyönder YK KASİAD YK Burcu Kösem konuk oldu.

Endüstri Radyo
Burcu Kösem – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2025 45:31


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Türk Kızılay İstanbul İl Başkanı, TABA-AmCham Yüksek İstişare Kur. Üyesi, Dışyönder YK KASİAD YK Burcu Kösem konuk oldu.

Echoes of New Eden - Eve Echoes Weekly Pod
Wandering Dragon Event details, Dark Aurora scam accusation, Mobi MTN Week 2

Echoes of New Eden - Eve Echoes Weekly Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2025 118:07


S6:E2 00:00:00 Intros (ad lib per hosts) 00:06:00 Game News (Official game announcements off Discord, Patch notes, leaked content) Leaked event stuff 00:33:00 Community News, Jubi joins another corp, Corp Tech stuff 00:37:40 Dark Aurora situation 01:10:00 Joda/Pand drama 01:17:00 Corp Tech 01:20:00 First Fortizar KM 01:24:00 New Kraken exec, SmoothMinimal, along with Sarp. 01:28:00 MOBI Mountain - Weekly PVP ranking

Endüstri Radyo
Prof. Dr. Ali Akdemir – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 40:45


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Arel Üniversitesi İktisadi ve İdari Bilimler Fak. Öğretim Üyesi – Lisansüstü Eğitim Merkezi Müdürü Prof. Dr. Ali Akdemir konuk oldu.

prof arel sarp lisans akdemir merkezi m
Endüstri Radyo
Prof. Dr. Ali Akdemir – Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 40:45


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek programına Arel Üniversitesi İktisadi ve İdari Bilimler Fak. Öğretim Üyesi – Lisansüstü Eğitim Merkezi Müdürü Prof. Dr. Ali Akdemir konuk oldu.

prof arel sarp lisans akdemir merkezi m
Radio UTL 65
Cultur'infos du 25 novembre au 2 décembre

Radio UTL 65

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2024 18:08


65 -Evènementiel et culture du 25/11 au 2/12/2024 (détails dans podcast)Escale suédoise 2024 à la médiathèque Simone Veil Bagnères de Bigorre- Exposition photos de Serge CRISTANTE du 15/10 au 30/11Quinzaine du Narthex « Oser croire en l'avenir ? »- Film « Bienvenue » et rencontre le 26/11 à 18h30, Bourse du TravailConférences :- « Histoire des premiers Pyrénéistes » par Etienne BORDES le 26/11 à 18h à l'Espace Jeanne Larroque - UTL- « L'architecture scolaire dans les Hautes-Pyrénées de 1870 à 1960 » par Maurice MORGA, salle multiculturelle Beaudéan, le 30/11 à 15hRencontre autour de son œuvre avec Marie-Hélène LAFON le 28/11 à 17h30 à l'Espace Jeanne Larroque – UTLRencontre avec Etienne FARAND, responsable secteur Val d'Azun du Parc National, le 30/11 à 15h à l'Abbadiale d'Arras en Lavedan« Montagnes en scène – Winter 2024 », festival du film de montagne, le 28/11 à 18h30 au Mega CGR www.montagne-en-scene.comSalon « Made in France Tarbes » du 29/11 au 1/12 au Parc des Expos hall 1 ‘Inauguration du Centre Léo Lagrange rénové à Séméac le 30/11 a/c de 16h30 (PO, concerts et à 22h concert « Sangria gratuite »Téléthon : de nombreuses animations dans le département- Les 24h du Téléthon du 2/11 au 30/11 avec l'Amicale des Sapeurs-Pompiers- Spectacle musical à Azereix, salle des fêtes le 30/11 à 20h30- « Amour, tracas et arsenic » le 29/11 à 20h30, Palais des Congrès Lourdes- Vente de mugs, magnets (Chalet Place Jean-Jaurès)et plantes grasses (Halle Brauhauban) le 30/11 à Tarbes- Animations les 29 et 30/11 , Espace Claude Miqueu Vic-en-BigorreMarchés de Noël :- Maison St Frai Tarbes les 30/11 et 1/12- Ibos, salle Pierre Comet les 30/11 et 1/12- Au « Lien » Ibos le 1/12 de 10h à 18h- A Sarp les 30/11 et 1/12- Place Centrale Trie/Baïse le 30/11, diverses animations a/c de 14h et à 20h30 visite guidée aux flambeaux de la BastideSPECTACLES Le Parvis : voir programmation www.parvis.netTarbes en scènes« Casse-Noisette » le 30/11 à 20h30 au Théâtre des NouveautésLa Gespe :15°édition « Heavy Metal Ritual » le 29/11 à 21hPetit Théâtre Maurice Sarrazin : Championnat tarbais improvisation le 22/11 à 20h30CAC Séméac : Soirées bienfaisance Téléthon les 29 et 30/11Ecla Aureilhan : match improvisation le 30/11 à 20h30 Cie Les ImprosteursPetit Théâtre de la Gare Argelès : « Impulls » le 30/11 à 20h30Espace Robert Hossein Lourdes :« Béline et Martin » opéra héroïque, le 30/11 à 20h30« Le Punch Club » du Québec, étape à Lourdes le 2/12 à 20h, matchs improvisationRéseau Musique et Danse Agglo TLP : concert de la Sainte-Cécile, salle fêtes Bénac le 30/11 à 20h30Conservatoire Henri Duparc : « Guitare- concert restitution classe Maître Ricardo MOYANO » le 1/12 à 17h30Concert Harmonie Bagnéraise le 30/11 à 18h , église St Vincent Bagnères de BigorreCinéma : voir podcastExpositions : (toutes les expositions dans podcast)Nouvelles :Les 29 et 30/11 « Le 2° souffle du papier » Bénédicte SENE au Tiers Lieu Amassa LourdesDu 23 au 30/11 « Palette Arc en Ciel » à la Mairie de SéméacDu 2/12 au 22/12 « DIBUJOS » de Nicanor de Elia au Pari TarbesJusqu'au 30/11 « Regards » photos de Renée ARMESTO, médiathèque Vic-en BigorreHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Synseligaen
#368 - A`jour i gull kampen - 9 timer uten scoring - LSK kaos år & Tromsø synseri.

Synseligaen

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2024 82:40


Brann vs Glimt / VAR kan avgjøre ALT / Molde stats er enorm / Kaos år i LSK/ Tabell skifte / Tromsø kan ende på kvalik / Rosenborg og overtid / Sarp er berga / Ferdige Odd.Support the showTrykk linken over "Support the show".Dette er link til patreon for deg som ønsker mere av Synseligaen på øret.Der får du tilgang på "en episode ekstra hver uke".Medlemskap på Patreon kan benyttes mnd til mnd eller et år av gangen ved ønske.Ved at du er Patreon medlem får du vanlig & en ekstra episode ukentlig avspilt der du hører på podcast, altså på samme platform (eks Spotify, Apple) om ønsklig.(Lydklipp er godkjent av utvalgte spillere & mediahus).Takk til Tv2 sporten & Europort for bruk av lydklipp i denne episoden.

Synseligaen
#360 - "Shit show i LSK..." - 10 på børs & 68 meter banner - Topplagene vant.

Synseligaen

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2024 75:07


Molde treffer med form / Brutal fotball Lørdag / 68 meter banner / Sarp i trøbbel / Millepæl for RBK / Tangvik til 10 på børs / Seige Ham Kam / Nunez, ikke noe spøk / Kfum er safe / Nielsen avskjed eller ei? Hvem inn / Glimt til gull.Support the showTrykk linken over "Support the show".Dette er link til patreon for deg som ønsker mere av Synseligaen på øret.Der får du tilgang på "en episode ekstra hver uke".Medlemskap på Patreon kan benyttes mnd til mnd eller et år av gangen ved ønske.Ved at du er Patreon medlem får du vanlig & en ekstra episode ukentlig avspilt der du hører på podcast, altså på samme platform (eks Spotify, Apple) om ønsklig.(Lydklipp er godkjent av utvalgte spillere & mediahus).Takk til Tv2 sporten & Europort for bruk av lydklipp i denne episoden.

Synseligaen
#356 - Gullet sendes til Nord - Molde er med igjen - Kan Brann snuble på slutten?

Synseligaen

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2024 70:36


Børven jo / Godset, gjesp / Kr sund er spennende / "2 kamper tilgode" / Sarp... alt er average / LSK sin krigs sone / Spisser som manglet kvalitet på Åråsen / Molde dominans / "Jeg tror Sandefjord overlever" / Viking, medalje i sikte.Support the showTrykk linken over "Support the show".Dette er link til patreon for deg som ønsker mere av Synseligaen på øret.Der får du tilgang på "en episode ekstra hver uke".Medlemskap på Patreon kan benyttes mnd til mnd eller et år av gangen ved ønske.Ved at du er Patreon medlem får du vanlig & en ekstra episode ukentlig avspilt der du hører på podcast, altså på samme platform (eks Spotify, Apple) om ønsklig.(Lydklipp er godkjent av utvalgte spillere & mediahus).Takk til Tv2 sporten & Europort for bruk av lydklipp i denne episoden.

Synseligaen
#351 - Formlaget Rosenborg - Glimt herjer - LSK... "Det stinker problemer".

Synseligaen

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2024 77:25


RBK i bedring, "i Eggens ånd" - Broholm, Selnæs & Holm - Glimt med storeslem - Sarp uten Meister - Press på Molde - LSK mareritt rekke - David Nielsen vs Ødegaard - Godset har en spiss, mangler et forsvar - Fredrikstad møter hverdagen - Sandefjord... "Synseligaen sin kjepphest".Support the Show.Trykk linken over "Support the show".Dette er link til patreon for deg som ønsker mere av Synseligaen på øret.Der får du tilgang på "en episode ekstra hver uke".Medlemskap på Patreon kan benyttes mnd til mnd eller et år av gangen ved ønske.Ved at du er Patreon medlem får du vanlig & en ekstra episode ukentlig avspilt der du hører på podcast, altså på samme platform (eks Spotify, Apple) om ønsklig.(Lydklipp er godkjent av utvalgte spillere & mediahus).Takk til Tv2 sporten & Europort for bruk av lydklipp i denne episoden.

Synseligaen
#349 - Når Rosenborg ble litt seg selv... - Endelig for Godset - "Kamma er formlaget, jo".

Synseligaen

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2024 58:48


Rosenborg ble litt Rosenborg / Godset, Møller & endelig seier / LSK, tre strake tap / Gym trener / Sarp uten Meister / Finne finner formen / Tamme Odd / "Kamma er formlaget, jo" / Borte statistikk / Fantasy snakken.Support the Show.Trykk linken over "Support the show".Dette er link til patreon for deg som ønsker mere av Synseligaen på øret.Der får du tilgang på "en episode ekstra hver uke".Medlemskap på Patreon kan benyttes mnd til mnd eller et år av gangen ved ønske.Ved at du er Patreon medlem får du vanlig & en ekstra episode ukentlig avspilt der du hører på podcast, altså på samme platform (eks Spotify, Apple) om ønsklig.(Lydklipp er godkjent av utvalgte spillere & mediahus).Takk til Tv2 sporten & Europort for bruk av lydklipp i denne episoden.

Synseligaen
#345 - Glimt på skinner - "Molde snart ferdig..." - Viking bør...vinne de to neste.

Synseligaen

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2024 68:24


Glimt durrer videre / Høgh og Helmersen / Seige Kåffa / Nunez / Dødball laget Kamma / Viking bør forsterke / Uforløst i LSK / "Sarp er langt unna fare" / 10 år siden sist for Brann / Melkersen under lupen / RBK og Holm / Fantasy snakk.Support the Show.Trykk linken over "Support the show".Dette er link til patreon for deg som ønsker mere av Synseligaen på øret.Der får du tilgang på "en episode ekstra hver uke".Medlemskap på Patreon kan benyttes mnd til mnd eller et år av gangen ved ønske.Ved at du er Patreon medlem får du vanlig & en ekstra episode ukentlig avspilt der du hører på podcast, altså på samme platform (eks Spotify, Apple) om ønsklig.(Lydklipp er godkjent av utvalgte spillere & mediahus).Takk til Tv2 sporten & Europort for bruk av lydklipp i denne episoden.

Mevlana Takvimi
ÖLÜMÜ DÜŞÜNMENİN FAZÎLETİ - 28 TEMMUZ 2024 - MEVLANA TAKVİMİ

Mevlana Takvimi

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2024 2:28


Dünyevî işlerden oluşan ağırlıklardan şikâyet buyuruyorsunuz; doğrudur. Bir insan, dünyevî işlerden dolayı gâfil bir kalp ile öldüğü zaman bunun ahiretteki vebâli daha fazladır. Allâhü Teâlâ sizi ve bizi muhâfaza buyursun. Âyet-i Kerîme ve hadîs-i şerîfleri tamamıyla tasdîk eden ârif zât, içinde bulunduğu vakitlerinin çoğunu Allâh (c.c.)'u anmaktan gafil bırakmaz. En kıymetli şey olan îman ile dolu kalb evinizi bekçi nezâretinden uzak bırakmazsınız. Altmışa varmış bir ömürden sonra insan, âhiret yolculuğu için yeterince tedârikte bulunmalıdır. Kendisini çoluk çocuk endîşesine veya mal yığıp çoğaltma arzusuna fedâ etmemelidir. “Senin bu âlemdeki sermayen sadece bir kefenden ibarettir. Onu da ya götürürsün ya götüremezsin, endişeliyim.” Peygamber (s.a.v.) Efendimiz: “Ümmetimden yetmiş yaşına ulaşan pek azdır” (Keşfü'l Hafa) buyuruyor. Bunun üzerine ezelî kısmete rızâ gösterip gelmesi yaklaşan âhiret yolculuğu için hazır olmalıyız. Dâimâ âhireti ve ölümü düşünmeliyiz. Peygamberimiz (s.a.v.)'in: “Ölümü çokça hatırlayınız” (Tirmizî) hadîs-i şerîfine itimad ederek tûl-i emel (uzun emel), mal ve mevkî' hırsı, hased, kibir ve benzeri bâtınî hastalıkları tedâvî hususunda “tefekkür-i mevt” denilen ölümü düşünmenin vereceği faydaların pek büyük olduğunu İmâm Gazzâlî (r.a.) beyân buyurmuşlardır. İnsanın ölümü düşünmekten kaçınması da bu karşılaşma, yüzleşme korkusundan ileri gelir. Oysa hep dediğimiz gibi, “Korkunun ecele faydası yok.” Korkulan bazı şeyleri düşünmekten kaçınmak, onunla mutlaka yüzleşeceğimiz gerçeğini ortadan kaldırmıyor. İşte ölüm de böyle. Kur'ân-ı Kerîm'de ifade buyrulduğu üzere, “Her canlı ölümü tadacaktır.” (Ankebut s. 57), “Sarp ve sağlam kalelere sığınsa bile!” (Nisa s. 78) Mevlâm muvaffâk buyursun. Amin. (Muhammed Esad Erbili (k.s), Mektubat, s.131)

Endüstri Radyo
Bora Yargıç - Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 43:56


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu programa SPK Bağımsız Denetçi, Ekonomist, Yeni Birlik Yazarı Bora Yargıç konuk oluyor.

Endüstri Radyo
Bora Yargıç - Nazlı Sarp ile Makrodan Mikroya Ekomercek

Endüstri Radyo

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 43:56


Nazlı Sarp'ın hazırlayıp sunduğu programa SPK Bağımsız Denetçi, Ekonomist, Yeni Birlik Yazarı Bora Yargıç konuk oluyor.

Sex Addicts Recovery Podcast
Ep 132 Yael shares her Experience, Strength & Hope

Sex Addicts Recovery Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2024 69:13


Join us in theis episode as Yael from Israel shares about finding the Podcast to start her recovery journey in SAA, her childhood and family life, and finally working the Steps and being of Service in SAA.    Links mentioned in this episode: The Blue Card: https://saauk.info/shop/leaflets/blue-card/ Just For Today aka The White Card: https://saauk.info/shop/leaflets/just-for-today-card/ Sponsorship Workshop in Sacramento July 6th: https://bayareasaa.org/announcements/summer-of-sponsorship-workshop-july-6th/ For questions, please contact the Monday Night Shame to Grace meeting of Sacramento at mondayshametograce@gmail.com.  To register, go to: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/summer-of-sponsorship-tickets-905739249477 To find the Playlists mentioned in this episode: Apple Music: search for “sarpod” and select Playlist instead of Top Results. Spotify: search for “SARP".   YouTube Links to music in this episode (used for educational purposes): Foreigner - In Pieces: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1l7aA_SJ-w Lou Gramm - Lost in the Shadows: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5eY0baENaL4 Hellblade 2 Ingunn Battle (Heilung & David Garcia): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cyd9i2AQd2w Yola - Walk Through Fire: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H2OmfJiSRAY   Be sure to reach us via email: feedback@sexaddictsrecoverypod.com If you are comfortable and interested in being a guest or panelist, please feel free to contact me. jason@sexaddictsrecoverypod.com SARPodcast YouTube Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLn0dcZg-Ou7giI4YkXGXsBWDHJgtymw9q   To find meetings in the San Francisco Bay Area, be sure to visit: https://www.bayareasaa.org/meetings To find meetings in the your local area or online, be sure to visit the main SAA website: https://saa-recovery.org/meetings/   The content of this podcast has not been approved by and may not reflect the opinions or policies of the ISO of SAA, Inc.

Vox&Hops
Post-Metal with Sarp Keski of Bipolar Architecture

Vox&Hops

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 39:07


Sarp Keski of Bipolar Architecture & I have a conversation about his 1st beers, the soundtrack of his youth, Turkey's Metal Scene, Post-Metal, Pelagic Records and his hangover cure. Throughout this chat Sarp drank a Coca-Cola while I enjoyed Boréale's "Nord-Est" the 6.5% NEIPA. This is a Heavy MTL presents Vox&Hops episode! Heavy MTL is Montreal's premier metal promoter. They host one of North America's best Metal Festivals & present countless amazing events during the rest of the year. I am truly honored & extremely excited to have them involved in the podcast. Make sure to check out Vox&Hops' Brewtal Awakenings Playlist which has been curated by the Metal Architect Jerry Monk himself on either Spotify or Apple Music. This playlist is packed with all the freshest, sickest & most extreme albums each week! Photo Credit: Eva Shield Episode Links: Website: https://www.voxandhops.com/ Join The Vox&Hops Mailing List: http://eepurl.com/hpu9F1 Join The Vox&Hops Thirsty Thursday Gang: https://www.facebook.com/groups/162615188480022 Bipolar Architecture: https://bipolararchitecture.bandcamp.com/album/metaphysicize Boréale: https://www.boreale.com/en Cryptopsy Tour Dates: https://www.voxandhops.com/summer Vox&Hops Brewtal Awakenings Playlist: https://www.voxandhops.com/p/brewtal-awakenings-metal-playlist/ Heavy MTL: https://heavymontreal.com/ Sound Talent Media: https://soundtalentmedia.com/  Evergreen Podcasts: https://evergreenpodcasts.com/ SUPPORT THE PODCAST: Vox&Hops Metal Podcast Merchandise: https://www.indiemerchstore.com/collections/vendors?q=Vox%26Hops Use the Promo Code: VOXHOPS10 to save 10% off your entire purchase. Pitch Black North: https://www.pitchblacknorth.com/ Use the Promo Code: VOXHOPS15 to save 15% off your entire purchase. Heartbeat Hot Sauce: https://www.heartbeathotsauce.com/ Use the Promo Code: VOXHOPS15 to save 15% off your entire purchase.

TV 2 B-Laget
Norge-guide del 3

TV 2 B-Laget

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2024 60:49


Hvem er Sarp? Stavangers gode arroganse. Bodø og Berg. Guttetur til Kristiansund. Topp-3 drammenserne. Oslo - peak by, middels fotball.

P3morgen
Noe attåt: Dans på bordet

P3morgen

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2024 40:01


Johannes har vært hos Anna og oppsummerer hvordan det var, Adelina har spist digg mat hjemme i Sarp og Karsten har løpt 30km hangover. God mandag da! Send oss mail på p3morgen@nrk.no

The Literary City
The Lighthouse Family: A Compelling Novel From The Turkish Ambassador

The Literary City

Play Episode Play 36 sec Highlight Listen Later Feb 13, 2024 41:24


My guest today, is an author from Turkiye, Firat Sunel. He is a career diplomat. He is currently the Turkish Ambassador to India.Firat is a demonstrably fascinating novelist. His latest novel, “The Lighthouse Family”, is a wonderful example of storytelling, of craft and of everything literary. I venture to say without qualification that it is one of the best novels I have read in recent years.Because this novel embraces a universally-resonant human sentiment, it makes it relatable across cultures, to anyone anywhere, even if the story it tells is set deep in rural Turkiye.We'll delve into the unique blend of ethnic authenticity and international appeal that characterizes contemporary Turkish literature, tracing its evolution from folk tales to modern intellectual prose. From the reforms of Kamal Atatürk to the global recognition spurred by Orhan Pamuk's Nobel Prize, Turkish literature has garnered increasing attention on the world stage.Firat Sunel is a product of the rich Turkish literary heritage. I had the opportunity of a conversation with him (together with the Lithuanian Ambassador Diana Mickevičienė) live at the Bangalore Literature Festival; and today I have the privilege of having him as my guest here—another conversation I am eager to have. To that end, joining me from his home in New Delhi is the Ambassador to India from Turkiye, Firat Sunel.Buy THE LIGHTHOUSE FAMILY: https://amzn.to/47NB3hhABOUT FIRAT SUNELTurkish diplomat, lawyer, scriptwriter, and author he studied law at Istanbul University and did his postgraduate at Bochum ruhr university in Germany. As a diplomat, he served in several countries and is now in New Delhi as Turkiye's ambassador to IndiaHis novels include Salkım Söğütlerin Gölgesinde [In the Shade of the Weeping Willows, 2011] which inspired a tV series called Büyük Sürgün Kafkasya [The Great Exile Caucasia], İzmirli [Izmirli, My Last Love, 2015] and Sarpıncık Feneri [The Lighthouse Family, 2020].WHAT'S THAT WORD?!Co-host Pranati "Pea" Madhav joins Ramjee Chandran in the fun etymology segment, "WHAT'S THAT WORD?!" where they discuss the word “DIPLOMAT”.CONTACT USReach us by mail: theliterarycity@explocity.com or simply, tlc@explocity..comOr here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/theliterarycityOr here: https://www.instagram.com/explocityblr/

Hizmetten
Bu yol uzaktır, menzili çoktur! | M.Fethullah Gülen Hocaefendi

Hizmetten

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2023 7:47


Sarp yokuşlarla dolu bu yol azık, teyakkuz ve temkin istiyor!.. *Yunus Emre'nin deyişiyle, “Bu yol uzaktır, menzili çoktur, geçidi yoktur, derin sular var.” Bu yolda kat' edilmesi gereken nice mesafe, geçilmesi gereken nice derya ve aşılması gereken nice tepe mevcuttur. Zorlardan zor bu meşakkatli yolculukta maddî-mânevî hiçbir engele takılıp kalmamak, dünyanın aldatıcı cazibedar güzelliklerinin ağına düşmemek ve yol yorgunluğu yaşamamak için her zaman ciddi teyakkuz ve temkine ihtiyaç vardır. *Rasûl-i Ekrem Efendimiz (sallallâhu aleyhi ve sellem), Ebû Zerr hazretlerinin şahsında bütün ümmet-i Muhammed'e şöyle buyurmuştur: جَدِّدِ السَّفِينَةَ فَإِنَّ الْبَحْرَ عَمِيقٌ وَخُذِ الزَّادَ كَامِلاً فَإِنَّ السَّفَرَ بَعِيدٌ وَخَفِّفِ الْحِمْلَ فَإِنَّ الْعَقَبَةَ كَئُودٌ وَأَخْلِصِ الْعَمَلَ فَإِنَّ النَّاقِدَ بَصِيرٌ “Gemini bir kere daha elden geçirerek yenile, çünkü deniz çok derin. Azığını tastamam al, şüphesiz yolculuk pek uzun. Sırtındaki yükünü hafif tut, çünkü tırmanacağın yokuş sarp mı sarp. Amelinde ihlâslı ol, zira her şeyi görüp gözeten, tefrik eden ve hakkıyla değerlendiren Allah, senin yapıp ettiklerinden de haberdardır.” *Bayezid-i Bistâmî Hazretleri der ki: “Bütün iç dinamizmimi kullanarak Cenâb-ı Hakk'a tam otuz sene ibadet ettim. Sonra gaybdan, ‘Ey Bâyezid, Cenâb-ı Hakk'ın hazineleri ibadetle doludur. Eğer gayen O'na ulaşmaksa, Hak kapısında kendini küçük gör ve amelinde ihlâslı ol!' sesini duydum ve tembihini aldım.” Bu video 23/08/2015 tarihinde yayınlanan “Hal ve Ümit” isimli bamtelinden alınmıştır. Tamamı burada: https://www.herkul.org/bamteli/bamtel...

M. Fethullah Gülen
Ve Sarp Yokuş Uhud l Sonsuz Nur Vaazları 30 l M.Fethullah Gülen

M. Fethullah Gülen

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2023 83:25


Ve Sarp Yokuş Uhud l Sonsuz Nur Vaazları 30 l M.Fethullah Gülen by Çınar Medya

Ahali Conversations with Can Altay
Episode 31: Alistair Hudson

Ahali Conversations with Can Altay

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2023 57:39


Renowned curator, and a trailblazer of “usefulness” in art, Alistair Hudson is the forthcoming Artistic & Scientific Chairman of ZKM (Center for Art & Media in Karlsruhe.Alistair Hudson grabbed everybody's attention when - with Adam Sutherland - he turned Grizedale Arts, an art institution in Northwest England's Lake District, into a hotspot of artistic discussion and production between 2004 and 2015. A directorship followed, at the Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art. There he developed the idea of the useful museum, opening up questions on how the museum ‘can be used' otherwise; simultaneously reflecting on a wide collection as well as new commissions and projects. In collaboration with the artist Tania Bruguera the Van Abbemuseum and Queens Museum, he got involved in the exhibition "Museum of Arte Util", later undertaking the role of co-directorship of the Association de Arte Útil that resulted from the exhibition. This project has become a repository of artistic activities that propose new uses for art, work on a 1:1 scale, and embrace artistic thinking to respond to urgencies, in short, all things dear to Ahali Conversations so far. This Episode includes additional questions by Betül Aksu, Ceminay Kara, Sarp Özer, and Alessandra Saviotti.Over the last two decades, Grizedale Arts has become an acclaimed and influential model for a new kind of art institution, one that works beyond the established structures of the contemporary art world.Liam Gillick works across diverse forms, whose wider body of work includes published essays and collaborative projects, all of which inform (and are informed by) his art practice.The British Home Office (the UK ministry responsible for immigration, security, and law and order) building was designed by Terry Farrell and has multiple integrated artworks by Gillick.Terminal Convention was a contemporary exhibition and symposium housed in the decommissioned terminal building of Cork International Airport in the Republic of Ireland. https://rhizome.org/editorial/2011/apr/07/terminal-convention/Arte Útil roughly translates into English as 'useful art' but it goes further suggesting art as a tool or device.https://www.arte-util.orgTania Bruguera is a politically motivated performance artist, who explores the relationship between art, activism, and social change in works that examine the social effects of political and economic power. https://art21.org/artist/tania-bruguera/The Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven is one of the leading museums for contemporary art in Europe. https://vanabbemuseum.nl/enCharles Esche is a museum director, who has been directing the Van Abbemuseum since 2004.John Ruskin was an English writer, philosopher, art critic, and polymath of the Victorian era. He wrote on subjects as varied as geology, architecture, myth, ornithology, literature, education, botany, and political economy. WikipediaThe ZKM (Center for Art and Media) in Karlsruhe “is a house of all media and genres, a house of both spatial arts such as painting, photography and sculpture and time-based arts such as film, video, media art, music, dance, theater, and performance. ZKM was founded in 1989 with the mission of continuing the classical arts into the digital age. This is why it is sometimes called the digital Bauhaus”. https://zkm.de/enPeter Weibel was a post-conceptual artist, curator, and new media theoretician. He was at the helm of ZKM since 1999. Weibel passed away in March 2023, shortly after the recording of this episode. Arts Council is UK's national development agency for creativity and culture. They invest public money from Government and The National Lottery into cultural institutions and projects. https://artscouncil.org.ukRainer Rochlitz (1946-2022) was a philospher, art historian focusing on aesthetics theory, and a translator who played a key role in publicizing the writings of German authors such as Benjamin and Habermas.Jürgen Habermas is one of the key theorists of the 20th century, with his widely read and influential works on communicative action, discourse, and perhaps most importantly on the “public sphere”. Erwin Panofsky was an influential art historian. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erwin_PanofskyJean-Luc Godard (1930-2022) probably needs no introduction, he was a filmmaker who pushed the medium to its limits while remaining relevant and influential, throughout his whole time on this earth. Onur Yıldız is a political theorist who also was the Senior Public Programmer at SALT, Istanbul.For more on Meriç Öner, head over to our conversation with her: https://www.ahali.space/episodes/episode-17-meric-onerStephen Wright defines “usology” as “a sweeping field of extradisciplinary enquiry, spanning everything from the history of the ways and means of using to usership's conditions of possibility as put forward in various theories of practice”.https://museumarteutil.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Toward-a-lexicon-of-usership.pdf Alessandra Saviotti, a frequent contributor in our Ahali Live Sessions, co-authored this article on the usological turn: https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/11/1/22This season of Ahali Conversations is supported by the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts. The Graham provides project-based grants to foster the development and exchange of diverse and challenging ideas about architecture and its role in the arts, culture, and society. This episode was also supported by a Moon & Stars Project Grant from the American Turkish Society.This episode was recorded on Zoom on December 15th, 2022. Interview by Can Altay. Produced by Aslı Altay & Sarp Renk Özer. Music by Grup Ses.

Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 97 – Unstoppable Israeli Football Coach with Charlie Cohen

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2023 65:24


In this episode, I would like you to meet Charlie Cohen. I met Charlie on LinkedIn and, after examining his profile, felt his story would be an interesting one to bring to Unstoppable Mindset. When we first spoke, Mr. Cohen said that he felt that he did not have an interesting story. I explained that I believed everyone has interesting and inspiring stories that only needed to be discovered. As you will see, Mr. Cohen does have a story worth hearing.   Charlie grew up in Sharon Massachusetts. He received his bachelor's degree from Purdue University and then went into sales. That's only the beginning of his story. I am going to leave it to Mr. Cohen to tell you about his history in his own words.   However, along the way he moved to Israel and married. He now owns his own sales company, and he also is the coach of an American Football team in his town.   There is much more to Charlie's story. He demonstrates an unstoppable drive in his work, his play activities and in his home life. He is inspirational and his story is very much worth your time to hear.     About the Guest: My Name is Charlie Cohen, or Chaim Matisyahu HaCohen. I live in a City located in Israel called Beit Shemish, married for 20 years with 6 wonderful children.  Currently I have my own sales company called Onbase Sales, working nights, during the day I teach at a Yeshiva and teach Talmud.  My hobbies include coaching football, where I am head coach of the Beit Shemish City team the Rebels in the American Football League in Israel.     I grew up in Sharon Massachusetts, graduated from Purdue University with a C+ average.  I was a social chairman for the Delta Tau Delta Fraternity which explains the C average.  With my C average and my experience being social at college, I knew that I was a born salesperson, getting my first job at Pitney Bowes Copiers, class of 93.  From Pitney Bowes rather than the straight path to Pharma Sales, I went to start ups, having the incredible experience founding one of the first cloud/SAAS companies in the World-Softscape.     In my spare time in my 20's I coached youth sports.  One year I had a life changing season taking a team who never won a game, beating a top team, with a girl leading the way as the captain, and heart of the team-on a boy's tackle team.  From the lessons learned from that season-I discovered my unique path and desire to attend a prestigious Torah Institution in Israel, not knowing how to read Hebrew and Aramaic.  My classmates were lifelong religious Jews who grew up reading and writing Hebrew, and 20 years old as well.  I was 32 newly married, many years behind, and had to support our starting family working in sales.   Today I have finished almost 75% of the Talmud, learning successfully under the greatest Torah teachers today, I still sell, and coach football and enjoy helping people, professionally and personally, and spiritually.    Ways to connect with Charlie:   https://www.linkedin.com/in/charles-cohen-onbase-sales-686498195/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CungggFSMT8       About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog.   Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards.   https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/   accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/       Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below!   Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can also subscribe in your favorite podcast app.   Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts.     Transcription Notes Michael Hingson  00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i  capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us.   Michael Hingson  01:20 Well, hi, everyone. I'm Mike Hingson, and you are listening to unstoppable mindset. Today we have a guest who I find extremely fascinating for lots of reasons. And I'm going to tell a story on him a little bit here. When we first chatted, it was because we had met on LinkedIn. And he wasn't sure he had a story to tell or was in a position to really tell stories. And I kind of disagreed with that a little bit because my belief is that everyone has a story to tell. But you know what, as we progressed, and as I asked him to prepare for the podcast, turns out there are lots of stories. So Charlie Cohen, welcome to unstoppable mindset. Thank you very much for being here.   Charlie Cohen  02:03 Thank you. It's quite an honor.   Michael Hingson  02:05 Well, I'm I think the honor is all mine. And one of the things that I learned about Charlie, and we'll get to it is that Charlie now lives in Israel. He used to live in the US and in Massachusetts, and I'm anxious to hear all about that story. But let's start kind of at the beginning, maybe while you were over here and going through school and anything you want to tell us about growing up and we can proceed from there.   Charlie Cohen  02:33 Yeah, sure. I mean, I grew up in Sharon, Massachusetts. My parents got divorced when I was young, four. So I was like your typical, you know, 70s latchkey kid. I grew up in Shannon, which was a Jewish neighborhood. I lived in an area that wasn't so Jewish. And, you know, it's kind of an awkward kid, I think I would describe myself very not good at sports. As a kid growing up, my father brought me to this thing called out Lipski sports club for kids that were athletically challenged. And I quickly caught up. And no, by nine years old, I was decent in basketball. And, you know, in my school that was like, you know, it was saving me from being bullied and picked on, I found myself getting a lot of fights and picked on that as an awkward, easy target. I think, as a kid growing up. I was actually my mom got married to a wonderful man when I was 10. And he allowed my mother to convince me play football. And football, for me is a kid growing up that wonderful, wonderful things for me, because I had absolutely no confidence, you know, I just really did not feel good about who I was strong, was picked on as a kid, it bothered me tremendously and bullied. And I think football gave me a certain self esteem, and also allowed me to pick on bullies back. So as a practice that I'd get so those kids have been picking on me and I get to hit them. And I was like, there was a movie called The Waterboy. And so I think I kind of imagined myself back like that, like just letting all that rage go. And it was a good outlet for me. Yeah, like we're pretty standard. You know, I strive to be popular like everyone else watched all the movies. You know, I was prom king, which was a quite a surprisement, dorky, 10 year old kid to you know, go to the gym lifting weights being a footballer and, and getting to be prom king and going to college at Purdue University, which is a big school and it was in fraternity their social chairman, doing everything I could have a good time have fun. I was pretty much probably a c plus student, I had a motto which was, you can always retake a party that annoys you take a class but never retake a party. And that was kind of like my life and you know, growing up, trying to be an average, you know, the fun, whatever. I don't think it's too you know, nothing too spectacular. One thing I did do decently during that age Um, as I coached sports is kind of a hobby. So 18 years old, I coach, one of my first teams, I was also a camp counselor. And I was younger too. And I just My father was a coach myself, I'll excuse me was a coach, you know, the family around him were coaches. And I just really, really loved it. And so I started to at 18, and had some amount of fun with it. And just kind of continued.   Michael Hingson  05:22 I'm curious, you said, if I understood your right that you started doing basketball at like, nine and you impart did it to stop being bullied? Yeah, what what do you mean by that? Why did that happen?   Charlie Cohen  05:36 Why was a bully, you know, it looked back, you know, first of all bullying is, to me, it's one of the saddest things, you know, if there's one thing I could ever change in this world, is stop bullying all types of people. It's tremendously horrible. And, you know, kids are weak, you know, kids come off as weak or socially awkward or weak. They're easy targets. So I was just an easy target. And just that, click that plane. And you know, this gave you kind of like a way of being, quote, unquote, socially acceptable, God. And I think that's what it was. I was also I should mention, I was throughout Hebrew school, too. I went to Hebrew school, like an average kid. And I had some hard times in school. And you know, I worked very hard, you know, just not to fall behind in school and the Hebrew school on top of it, I was just the worst student there. And the self esteem problems and everything else. I was just a troubled kid in the class. And they asked me to leave, or I quit, depending on the ask, but I was actually thrown out of Hebrew school. So I was actually a reject from Temple Israel, something I'm very proud of today, because you never know you're thrown out of school.   Michael Hingson  06:43 Yeah, well, you never know how things change and how you evolve over time. Well, you went to Purdue so you spend time in Indiana. Yeah. So from from cold Massachusetts to cold, Indiana.   Charlie Cohen  06:57 Yeah. And that's where I lost the Boston accent. Like I was completely miss Charlie from Boston. And they said that the summer out there, an extra summer at Purdue, and I came home when I heard Hey, Charley, I had been Charlotte, how would it be? And I heard the accent. I heard it was gone. Boston accent   Michael Hingson  07:15 Yeah. So you don't do Paki a kind of Harvard Yard anymore?   Charlie Cohen  07:20 I haven't done it since my 20s You know, I stopped doing it just once you're here and it's over. Once you hear the accent, a little dry sound like that?   Michael Hingson  07:30 Yeah, well, it's okay. There's nothing wrong with having having those kinds of of accents either. There's nothing wrong with being proud of where you come from.   Charlie Cohen  07:39 That's true. You should be inclusive to all accents even Boston accents   Michael Hingson  07:42 as well. Yeah, there's nothing wrong with that my my memories of living in Winthrop for three years and being associated with Massachusetts for some other times around that are very fond. I loved being there and love the accent. And I always found sports fans in Massachusetts. Incredible. Oh, yeah. You know, the if, if the Sox lost the opening game of the season, you immediately heard wait till next year.   Charlie Cohen  08:12 I told my kids I was a big fan before 2004. And I don't care so much. But   Michael Hingson  08:18 yeah, it's it's a different world today. And I was just gonna say I wonder if people say that now since they've had a couple of, of successes in the 2000s. But, you know, nevertheless, they are they're very avid fans back there. And that's okay. It's it's fun.   Charlie Cohen  08:37 It is fun. It's a good healthy outlet. Yeah.   Michael Hingson  08:41 So you went to college and Purdue and all that. And then what did you do with your your life?   Charlie Cohen  08:46 Yeah, so I was a sales guy started off in sales and 93 went back to Massachusetts. After graduation, I took a job selling copiers with Pitney Bowes. And you know, the idea was to be a good pay your dues and get a pharmaceutical sales job, but, you know, get yourself a car, a nice, expensive car. And I traveled with a few different companies and found that wasn't for me and went to startups, which was surprised everyone because I was like, 1984 you know what, I did that. I love the creativity. I love the freedom. I love the honesty within. So I just fell from a salesperson. I just enjoyed it much better than a corporate gig.   Michael Hingson  09:23 Yeah. What? So what kind of startups Did you participate in? Or did you start up?   Charlie Cohen  09:29 Yeah, so I was in a whole bunch of you know, as a kid, I got into the unit. These guys introduced me to. I met some guys that were very into computers. You know, I don't want to stereotype but they needed a salesperson and I I needed someone who knew something about computers. And we made a really cool team and put young guys and they introduced me to email and internet and all this incredible stuff and like 93 or 94 and it bounced around. If you're trying to start a company. We work for companies on the side and I know had two brothers and a father. And we kind of hit it off. And I was getting, you know, I was working for one company that worked for another. And we developed a lot of business together. And they ended up hiring me as a deferred sales guy and in their side of the house and act in Massachusetts in 1984. And we ended up building probably one of the first cloud and SaaS companies in the world, which was really cool. was really that was   Michael Hingson  10:26 escape net softscape. Soft substrate rather not escaped.   Charlie Cohen  10:31 All right, yeah. So in what   Michael Hingson  10:32 in what did it do?   Charlie Cohen  10:34 So So basically, what happened, it was their software guys, they made real software that was working, you know, sold in boxes. And one company in the area asked them to build a database version of the old ones, the old days were flat file that was slow. And these guys wanted a nice, big, fast version of it. So they built this task pad calendar on a database. And we tried to capitalize and sell it, and no one really understood what it was and how to how to use it. And I figured out that you could use it for performance reviews. So you have a huge company, and you say you have 26,000 worldwide employees. And you know, why don't you use instead of paying Iron Mountain $10 and $50. For paper? Why don't you use us for $5, you have a database and query it and do all sorts of cool stuff. And you're like, wow, that's really neat. And no one at the time knew how to host a web server, they didn't know didn't know how to deal with routers, or firewalls or any of that stuff. So we would say, Hey, do you want us to host it for you until you're ready? And they say, Sure. So they pay us a few extra $1,000 to host it. And that's where we got the that's, that's it. That's how we had it. That's a cloud. That's our cloud SaaS company. Wow. Yeah. It's really cool. It's really, really cool.   Michael Hingson  11:47 So how long did you do that?   Charlie Cohen  11:49 So we were there. I was here for a few years, you know. And I kind of from there at the same time, or a little bit before that. I had a hobby and which I was a coach, Coach, I coached football or coach to the sports. And so we did that for three years. And what interfered with that was it's kind of like distorted the football thing. You know, the coach, Hey, you   Michael Hingson  12:12 gotta keep your priorities straight.   Charlie Cohen  12:14 Yeah, so my life and I had that I had an experience that really changed changed my life.   Michael Hingson  12:22 My brother in law is a contractor and Bill's homes, remodels, homes and so on. But as I said, you got to keep your priorities straight. In the winter. He lives in Sun Valley, Idaho, but for many years, in the winter, he would go over to France and was a licensed mountain ski guide in Europe. And so he took people and did off piste skiing. So as I said, you got to keep your priorities straight. And the winner, at least for Gary. Yeah, he doesn't. He doesn't do that anymore. But now he's talking about retiring. So there you go. That's awesome. So you, you, you coach football. Yeah. And obviously, that, that kept you busy. And that, that in a job probably kept you out of trouble.   Charlie Cohen  13:14 That was the idea. You know, I suppose my mom married a wonderful person. And he was always involved in sports and giving back and, you know, it was something he just did. And I always appreciated that and I love coaching. And it was a lot of fun. I got a call. Like, I think in 1995, from from from the Sharon, you know, head of the Pop Warner team asking me to coach saying that there's a team that never won a game, they give up 350 points a game, they never scored in the best play. It was it was a girl. And they said if I was a last resort, if I didn't take this team, they weren't playing this year. And I just thought it was so cool. So I said I'll do it as the best thing ever did. What happened? Well, the first thing I did is I had a coach named Jim, Jim Cummings. And it's actually his son JJ. It was is a big, I think a commander in the Navy. And he was actually featured. He was actually one of the people that did the Top Gun, I guess Tucker, came out. And he was one of the people you know, you know, being a consultant in terms of flying and trying to make the experience in movies real as possible. But he's the father, Mr. Cummings, and he was my coach and Pop Warner in high school. He was the line coach and the defensive coach. And first thing he did is he went to him and I said, Coach Cummings, he I know he retired. But I got a problem. I got a huge project and I need your coach, offense, our coach line, defensive, you have fun because he was never a logical Jonathan's. So he thought it was funny. And I said, I'll deal with the parents. I'll deal with all the stuff. And he said, Okay, I'll deal with you until we work together. And I worked with another person Steve Rabb who was a senior when I was a freshman. He's a great guy. He coached with us and we put together a hell of a coaching staff. And we really gave it. We really, really coached our brains out. We really worked hard for these kids. And it was incredible, you know. So we basically tried our hardest to turn this team around that we were losing games like 14, six and 21. Seven. We had a game against this town called Hopkinton. And which was like two Oh, and six teams. And these guys, these kids have never won a game because they coach and they even call it the toilet bowl. And, yeah, that's really not good, especially when you lose the game 14 to six. So we lost that game. And I was sad myself at the end of the game. I had them all come out, you know, in a circle around me. And I looked at their pants, nice yellow, bright yellow, I had them stick out their fingernails, and I checked their fingers and they're all clean. I touched their foreheads. They're all clean. And the parents all around us. And I said there's one good thing about this game is that your parents don't have to wash your uniforms for next game. That's what I said. And I also said that he lost this game not because that you're stinky, the worst team in the world, but because you have a combined heart of a field mouse, and that just came out of my mouth. But you know, I thought that was that just as I couldn't believe I said that you have the combined out of the field mouse and we're playing this team called North Attleboro and that that name sounds scary North Attleboro, and they were that good. This is like the perennial champions in Massachusetts at that time. And these teams are undefeated, they go to Orlando, and we're planning playing them. The week coming up. And I say to these guys, if you play like this next week, they're going to kill you. And you'll be lucky to go home with your parents. And I made them all promise me that they're going to play 110% And I don't care what the jersey is the Patriots jerseys, a Jets jerseys of the championships. I don't care who it is, you're going to play your guts out, and they will promise me that. We showed up that game against North   Michael Hingson  16:59 Attleboro. And the girl was still playing, I assume. Yeah,   Charlie Cohen  17:03 girls, fantastic, fantastic. I didn't I didn't pick on her during that game. You know, she was she's a fantastic player in person. And we won 13 to 12. We won 13 and 12 She scored two touchdowns. It was funny, you know this, they missed a field goal by an age when kid caught it. Ben Bradley who turned up being a veteran and I racked caught a ball fourth and when he hits times, like 10 years old, caught the ball fourth and one on his hip. You know to North Attleboro, puffiness ran into each other and ran into each other. And then Jesse ran for a touchdown. It was just like, ran out of a movie, ran out of a movie. And we went through to what was one of the greatest, you know, I'd say, before became, you know, this is one of the greatest days of my 20s Definitely, definitely a great experience winning that game blew me away, blew me out of the water. Wow.   Michael Hingson  17:53 You know, and it doesn't get any better than that. But that also proves the value of a coach by any standard, you know, that it's all about the coach, being able to really get the team to do the things that they're supposed to do. Yeah. And there's, there's not enough that you can possibly say about the value of really a good coach. And did kids tell you after that game, that your comment about the amount of heart they have? Did anyone say that that made a difference?   Charlie Cohen  18:25 No, I don't think you know, these are kids. You know. One of the coaches I wanted to grow today is the head coach of York, Maine at that small team. And she had she says, she's doing a great job. I think they got the semifinals. And I'm glad that she's doing well. She's a hell of a hell of a person back then. And her. And her grandfather was a great legend in Shannon as a basketball and someone I looked up to tremendously and copied as a coach, I had the honor to coach his grandchild was just incredible honor for that. But you know, what happened was this like, after that happened, all these movies, these movies came out, like the Mighty Ducks came out. Little Giants came out. And people kept on come up to me laughing at me saying you hear that movie? Ha ha, you're a Disney coach. I'm like, what to like, you know, girl, when it's like, you, you're like the real Disney coach. And everyone thought was funny. And and I thought and I guess, you know, it dawned on me. You know, it's like, the first time I think I ever really made the make, maybe Association and hearing the call of God in my life. Because, you know, I realized that winning that game is a miracle. Like all the things I mentioned about the kid catching it up first and one on his hip, you know, the two players running into each other and the fact that they played so great, perfect. I mean, I couldn't coach him that we couldn't coach a better game. I mean, you can count the errors and mistakes that we made as a team and as a coach in a Pop Warner game, you know, an amateur like, you know, talking, we coach professionally. And that's impossible. I'm not that smart. You know, we're not that good. We're not that we'll practice Just and I realized it was an open miracle for me that the odds of us winning that game, I could play 100 times you lose. And if we've lost 2114, it doesn't mean anything, I still would have been a great coach. And, and I really took it to heart, you know, the message of why God would interfere with the pop board game to make it win. And I think is what you said, there. If we'd lost 21, something, I think I would have told you it was in a great coach was a great team, this person did this dismiss, I wouldn't have accepted it. I think when I realized that the team one I had to accept there was a great coach and I had a gift. And I realized that God had orchestrated all that for me to take home that lesson. And then I wasn't a worthless person, I wasn't someone just, you know, she could drink in or having fun. And my life is a bit more meaningful than that. And that I should take myself a little bit more seriously because I could do some good in this world. And I think that's where it really started for me.   Michael Hingson  20:54 On the other side of it, or the other part of it is, you mentioned God interfering. And I kind of question God interfering in the game. Well, yeah, because was it that or was it you were finally listening to God. And I keep going back to the comment that you made about the amount of heart that they had, and whether they recognized it at the time. The point is that you struck a nerve. And you listen to God, who put those words, you know who, who gave you those words to use, and you had the choice to use them or not. And I think that the God gives us the opportunity and the ability to choose, and that's one of the greatest gifts that he's ever given us, which is the ability to choose, it's up to us as to whether we want to listen or not, I wish more people would really stop and listen to what God tells them. Well, you clearly did that. Look what happened? Yeah, it's   Charlie Cohen  21:55 interesting what you're saying, because I think if I look at myself, I think if I didn't have that, like, pat on the shoulder, look, you're the one you have to fix. If you're a great coach, you have value. I think without that knowledge that there's a value to me personally, I would never even think of of trying to hit my potential as a God fearing person. It just never occurred to me, why not go to the Kentucky Derby? Why not party? Why not have fun? Wouldn't does it matter if I hit my potential or not? I'm a good guy, it doesn't really matter. And, you know, all the speeches that you gave the gifts of football team and everything that came out, and that kind of came back on the full circle. And you know, I look at people, you know, I think that's the number one reason why people don't listen, it's because they think why should I try I can make a difference in this world and doesn't matter anyway. Yeah, I hope if someone hears this, they hear that, that just the biggest lie out there. It's not true. That people, you know, I certainly I believe this. And I've learned this that evil, evil exists only because there's a vacuum, that we don't achieve our potential. And when people don't achieve their goodness that they could do. That leaves the room for evil people to be successful in our place. And I think that that's, that's something I took to heart that if I have a potential for good to do good and be good, I'm going to do my best for God and my world. And everybody you know,   Michael Hingson  23:13 and that is all you can do. Right? As long as you know, you're doing your best you're trying as hard as you can. What more can can you or God ask for?   Charlie Cohen  23:23 I hope I hope I hope I'm doing I hope I'm making God proud. I hope that my ancestors proud I'm making everyone proud, you know, but yeah.   Michael Hingson  23:33 You know, you as long as you're doing your best, and you know you're doing your best. And that's the thing you can stop every day and think about did I do as good as I could today? Could I learn something from everything that happened today, there's nothing wrong with that. I wish more of us and I wish all of us would take a little bit more time to think about that every day. Because that thinking and that opening oneself up really does make a big difference. And in our lives, if we allow that to happen.   Charlie Cohen  24:05 A huge thing he was saying, I tell you, you know, I have a whole I coach today in Israel, the TerraForm within my city. And there's a huge lesson I learned with one of these kids that I that I you know back in that team. And that I realized something incredible that people perform where their self esteem is. So if I think I'm a loser, I behave like a loser. If I think a champion, I'll get myself up there. And then I realized that it's not going to change someone's opinion of themselves. I'll never change their, their their performance on the field. And it was an incredible thing to learn because I learned something about myself that if I thought of myself as nothing that why should we try, you know, one of these kids doing a drill and I'm like, Hey, I don't want to mention his name because he's a doctor today. You know, and you might listen to this. I don't want to mention his name as a kid. One of my favorite players, but he looks at me I say why don't you pick it up? Let's call him Joe Joe making up his day. Why don't you try a little harder? He goes, Why should I we're gonna lose anywhere on Saturday. And the whole team looks at this kid goes, well, he's right. And I was beside myself, you know, because we're working hard to turn that culture chaser ideas around. And this kid just basically just declares mutiny says, Why should we try? What's it matter? We're going to lose anyway, you know what I do it? And I'm like, Oh, my gosh, my season's over. So rather than lose my temper, I pulled them aside. And I said, you know, God, I've had it. We're going to talk about this now. Jojo, either, either on right, or you're right. But here's your take on it. You think you're doing a good job, and I'm nitpicking. I'm always on your case. What you do is never ever good enough. Is that right? goes no, go. Don't lie to me. Because yeah. So you basically excuse me being a nitpicker. He's doing a decent job. And I'm just really nothing like nothing he does is good enough. So he said, Is that how you feel? He says, yes. I said, Well, we both agree on one thing, what you're doing. But here's what we disagree. You think you're doing okay? Because this is your potential, you're hitting your potential. I think you're much greater than that. And therefore you're undershooting your potential. And the question is, is why don't I believe in you more than you believe do? And the kid was stud stopped? And then I couldn't. I said, whatever you want now, but it's your choice. Do you want to be great, or you're the average, if you're great, I'm with you. If you want to be averaged and go home, watch Bugs Bunny. But it's up to you now. And he says, I want to be great coach. I said, Okay, great. I put him back in a line, you know, the drill, and of course, 110% box on over. And I made a big deal about it that jumped up and down and shared and we made him a captain for the day. And it was it was a turning point individual. And I think that that lesson being brought to the whole team took that last game that I mentioned Hopkinton, to kind of get through to everybody. But it's a huge, it's a huge idea that why should I try? We're gonna lose any way the world is going to be destroyed. People are too powerful evils too big. And I think that that's that attitude that I find myself having to fight constantly like, it does matter. You never know if there is a God and He's listening. Who knows what person can make a difference? You know, you did you know, did you win the game? No, that came we lost that story we lost. And that's what the Hopkins Yeah, it took like three, four weeks the Hopkinton game where it's at the heart of the field most iconic, given that same speech after I saw it worked to every kid, except for the girl, girl, the girl I need to give that speech to. But I gave that speech to a lot of kids. And you know, I think we finally got the metrics that week. And you know, when we beat that team, it blew my mind. And even years later, it blew my mind. And it still does to this day, just I just shake my head and say that we   Michael Hingson  27:35 were talking about that. But you talked about Joe Joe and telling him to really live up to his potential. What happened with him? You said he became a doctor?   Charlie Cohen  27:43 Yeah, as a doctor. I don't know how he is in sports. But he's a doctor. Yeah,   Michael Hingson  27:47 but But did he ever acknowledge to you? That your comment, your observation made a difference for him? Do you think that it did?   Charlie Cohen  27:58 I don't know. Listen, when you coach, you don't really? I don't know. You know, I call back all my coaches and say thank you to them. I hope I did. But I probably didn't. You know, I didn't go back to coach Cummings. And I did ask him to coach with me. So that was a nice thing, I guess. But you know, you don't coach for that. I hope so my parents, my mother tells me that people tell her and my father tells me that people tell them that I made quite an impact that they're incredible thing. So with me because I went to Israel, but I get to my parents that people are happy with me.   Michael Hingson  28:28 Well, and ultimately you have to be happy with yourself. But you have to do that, in a way and for a reason that that really makes sense. And it isn't just inflating an ego, you can still look back on what you did and listening to you. Right and talk about it. It certainly sounds like you recognize that you said valuable things to people and invaluable things to people and then it's up to them as to how they want to use it. But you've done your part.   Charlie Cohen  29:03 Yeah, they're also little kids. You know, they were little kids. Oh, yeah. Hopefully they remember something or had to put their degree, I hope they had a great experience. They look back on it with fondness and say I was a good guy. And you know, I wasn't too hard on them. And if I was I'm sorry. But yeah,   Michael Hingson  29:17 so that story, really, but if it made a difference   Charlie Cohen  29:22 made a difference in my life. There you go. So I was going about this company thing, and I was going about my life and having everything in the way I wanted intrigued about when this you know, when this conscious attack hit me, you know, when I realized that, you know, I was really living out a dream that wasn't necessarily mine, and that I wanted to pursue something what I thought would be greater. And so you asked me how well I this is trying to answer that question. How long were they selling software for? So it was about you know, a few years and about 1999 I had that change and I decided I was going to really pursue my dream which I remember Well as was my dream, which is to come to Israel to learn Talmud and to train to be a rabbi, but not a pulpit rabbi, not like a pulpit rabbi like that, but really become, you know, more of the classical, a teacher, you know? Yeah, but the classical sense, you know, the old school because like football in old school,   Michael Hingson  30:20 right? So in 1999, you   Charlie Cohen  30:23 left my job left by, you know, my girlfriend at the time, I left my life and declared myself a religious person, you know, and it was a was a hard, very difficult thing to do. Because, you know, my friends go on to Purdue for homecoming, meeting people on Friday and Saturday night's event that was over for me, you know, and that was important, Israel, that was just a life change itself. You know, deciding to take it upon myself to learn something. That's, you know, the book itself, that Talmud is like 2000 years old, it's written in Aramaic and Hebrew, it's not easy for someone who's not good in school or good in foreign languages. So the idea that I wouldn't go master that was kind of far out there. I would have asked yourself that, like, that was like, you know, definitely far out.   Michael Hingson  31:11 But you did it.   Charlie Cohen  31:13 And still do it. Yep. Still process. It's your horses. Yeah.   Michael Hingson  31:17 Well, it is a process and there's nothing wrong with it being a process. You know, it's fun to, to hear the old joke about somebody practicing law or somebody practicing medicine, and why are you still practicing? Why aren't you good at it? And the answer is that, if you're really any good at it, you're always learning. That's true. It isn't a static thing. And it shouldn't be a static thing. And I think life is the same way. I think we should all be practicing living. And that's because it's an ongoing process. That's awesome. You're 100% right, which is really cool. So when did you move to Israel in what 2000 2000   Charlie Cohen  31:56 I broke up my girlfriend, I went to Israel for a month I went to, you know, I went back and then I went back to softscape, which is the company and I paid off my credit card debts, it got some really big sales, I got a huge sail from the state of Connecticut, that paid for me to pay off my debts in my car, and come to Israel to go to school. And I went to I went to go you call a Shiva for two years, got married, and then went to another issue and is really one, like a real is really a Shiva. You know, people speak Hebrew, little 20 year old kids 22 year old kids are 3232 when we walk around with these Israeli kids, you know, I don't care what they think I'm not trying to, you know, be in class with them. I look at a funny, you know, imagine, imagine some 30 year old guy showed up in high school saying, Well, I want to be a freshman. Excuse me physics.   Michael Hingson  32:44 Yeah. But you didn't.   Charlie Cohen  32:46 Yeah, I did. You know, it's crazy. I didn't do it. I did it. Yeah.   Michael Hingson  32:51 So tell us Oh, you know, what's you're still doing and and so what did you do from a job standpoint? Then you moved to Israel? You went to school?   Charlie Cohen  32:59 Yeah. So what I did is I worked part I worked at night, you know, I my, my like I stepfather's father who was like a grandfather to me and wonderful man. He put himself through law school, he supported himself. So I had, I knew plenty of people who worked at jobs into putting themselves through law school. So I said, I'll do the same. And I worked at night and sales, you know, so I continued my sales profession, I still have the sales profession. I still, you know, feed my family, I still work. And that's my that's my main, you know, job where I make money. Is it sales, corporate sales business to business, which I like, right? Because if I sold insurance, I would never stop. You know, everyone's everyone's a prospect. So I like this business, because you can shut it off.   Michael Hingson  33:46 Yeah. So when did you start your own company to sell?   Charlie Cohen  33:51 So I basically, eight years ago, we had our sixth kid, oh, my wife did. And you know, we need more money. And at the time, I'd worked part time for some Cisco resellers that nothing big and I needed another story because I had so copiers in the 90s. That's great. And I had his awesome startup story in the 90s. It's like 2017. I was like, Well, what have you done. And so I went up to a company in Israel, in Medina city out here, and basically took them from almost nothing to 120 million. And it was like a top four startup in Israel. So it was really cool. I had a team of guys, I got to coach again, and a great bunch of guys, and we really build that company. It's awesome. And that was one thing I did. And after that, I did another company that you know, that's another that we basically saved after two years of no revenue and turned it around. But I started my own company, which basically works with a lot of Israeli startups, helping them sell to America, you know, cheap, easy and, you know, successfully, you know, and so that's what I'm doing today. I'm a pitchman by trade. That's like my specialty.   Michael Hingson  34:57 Kitchen. Well, there's nothing wrong with that. giving giving good pitches and being able to do it effectively, is really what it's about, and telling stories and telling stories   Charlie Cohen  35:08 and being underage to my grandmother's call me that. No, it's Nick. You're annoyed. Yeah, I turned it into that sorry, turn into a job.   Michael Hingson  35:15 Nothing wrong with nudging. I, I've been accused of that. And and I have no problem with it.   Charlie Cohen  35:21 So you're a master salesman to you though. So thanks, man. You   Michael Hingson  35:24 got to do what you got to do, you know? Yeah, but it works out pretty well. So you're coaching football over there?   Charlie Cohen  35:33 Yeah, so I have a real team of adults. And I love it. And it's just so much fun. I just never thought in a billion years that I would come back here. But this to Israel. You know, Robert Kraft is the owner of the Patriots. Also, Mark wolf of the Vikings also helps out. And there's an Israeli Football League here, American Football League. And this team came to beach initially, I heard that I was once a great coach. And they they had to come up with a team to coach that again. And then maybe the head coach has just been great.   Michael Hingson  36:04 There you are. Yeah, it's   Charlie Cohen  36:06 good for my kids to my kids was really so they don't understand what it was like they don't understand what a coach is. They had no idea. So it's fun for them. They can see the excitement, the games, and you know, the hubbub. And so it's good for my kids just kind of see what I was like as a coach, what it is,   Michael Hingson  36:22 what really makes what really makes up a good coach.   Charlie Cohen  36:27 Oh, gosh, that's the greatest question. I think I've heard a long time. And I say it's great because I put so much thought into this. And I found out something there's, there's a thing called it and Hebrews called a meter. A meter is a character trait, a character trait. And one of the one of the schools of thought I belong to is one of these lifelong dedication to developing your positive character traits. And one of the most important character traits they talk about, or that my rabbis Rabbi Rabbi talked about, so the person you know, so imagine, you know, a coaching tree. And so this coaching tree goes back, and he's one of the greatest Jewish coaches of all time, his whole thing was we call I until I until the media good, I seen the good things. And what I can tell you, as a good coach, a winning coach, a winning coach, you have to have a good eye. But it doesn't mean I'm a nice guy could be the most selfish mean person ever, right and manipulative, allotted and corrupt. But if I have to have a good eye and see the talent, so you hear people say, I don't know what he saw in me, but he brought it out. So all good coaches, I think winning coaches have the ability to see the talent, see the good, you know, and I obviously don't want to use that in a corrupt way. I don't want to use it to know to, you know, but I think that the number one thing to win is an eye and Toba a good eye and also from marriage to marriage to and it doesn't mean necessarily a visual eye means a spiritual eye that you see the good.   Michael Hingson  37:59 Well, and you see where everyone fits into that mosaic into that pattern.   Charlie Cohen  38:07 Right, right, right. 100%. And I think that is the key to a winning coach. Because if you if you do that, right, there's no politics, everyone's united, everyone feels good. And you're able to kind of harness different talents and get more together, because people aren't threatened and they know their place. And they know that you recognize their place, and you see where they belong, and that they're important. Like, one of the biggest lessons to me that I just can't drill into other people's heads is if I actually I actually hurt my Achilles, I actually put my Achilles tendon in the second game of the year, because I sprinted to get water for my team, there was a timeout, and I sprinted so fast, I put my Achilles heel, and I ran and God water. And then I did it a second time. And I was limping. And I looked at the guys on the sideline, and I threw the water bottle, left them with them, and they came off. And I said, What getting water for your team is not important. You know? Because it's true. It is, you know, like, getting what you okay, you know, I'm not, there's a defensive coordinator out, there's an offensive physic you know, someone making the play, okay, I'm the head coach, and I'm not doing anything, but I have to sit there and look important, which I'm gonna get water. You know, I've got to get water, I want to do it, I'm gonna do it the best I can. And the water person is so important to me and my team. And I think everyone knows at the end of the year that, that anyone that's on the team is important as a place, whether you're cheering, whether you're getting water, whether you're a star, it doesn't matter. And I wish that, you know, I could carry that away to my community that if I felt that everyone felt that way, I think the world would be a much better place.   Michael Hingson  39:40 Yeah, it's everyone has a place. And it seems to me that the best value that a coach can bring to a team is helping everyone recognize not only their place and that every place is important, but Do you help bring out their desire? I won't say ability, because the ability is probably there but their desire to do the best with that place.   Charlie Cohen  40:12 Yeah, that's the whole. That's the whole 100%. Yeah.   Michael Hingson  40:15 And that you're able to then bringing out the best in everyone by helping them to recognize that they're really probably better than they thought, which is what unstoppable mindset is all about. We love to get people to recognize that they can be more unstoppable than they thought. So I really appreciate the things you're saying, because that's exactly what this podcast is all about.   Charlie Cohen  40:37 That makes me happy because I first met you, I didn't know what I have to offer. Shortcut my self esteem.   Michael Hingson  40:44 There you go see? Well, Coach, you did it. So it seems to me that, and I don't want to oversimplify it. But in one sense, a rabbi as like a coach or a coach is very much like a rabbi in the in the sense that you're, you're clearly a teacher.   Charlie Cohen  41:04 You know, there's, you know, my wife, when I first came to Israel, you know, I was a coach and Israel, they were behind, no one knew what it was. And afterwards, when he was able to cope, Jay was a life coach and was a psychologist, everybody. Some wife says to me, you know, time, everyone's a coach now, and you missed it. And I said, Listen to us, you know, that it was a winning coach, when he coaches is still unique, you know, so like, a winning coach, a winning coach, a coach that knows how to win consistently, you know,   Michael Hingson  41:34 right. So Can Can everyone be a winning coach?   Charlie Cohen  41:39 I think everyone can be a winner. Yeah, I think everyone can be a winner, but you said, you know, maybe your skills aren't to be a coach, maybe your skills are, or to be the best water person or maybe your skills to be the best, you know, quarterback, or the running back or lineman, or whatever I you know, that's the thing, you don't have to be jealous at my job, and honestly, be jealous of your job. You know, I think we all have our jobs, and we all should be the best at what we are at our jobs. And hopefully, we can fill this void, and Dr. Evil out by being so awesome. Yeah, that's what I hope. Well, I'm   Michael Hingson  42:12 I agree, and I, I enjoy doing what I do. I've always enjoyed doing what I do. And I know that in my life, there are choices that I've made that I could have probably done better at, I think that's the biggest issue, you can always still, I think, be your own best coach for you. If you really think about what you do. And that gets back to self analysis. But I think I think everyone can, in a sense, be a coach, but your job of coaching may just be you. Because I do believe that ultimately, yeah, we have to make our choices, and we're the ones that can know best what we really need if we think about it and work at it.   Charlie Cohen  42:54 Yeah, 100%. And I think that for, for me, my own personal experiences, all the external things I was saying to everyone else came back on me, you know, all the things you have the heart of the field mouse, you know, you don't have character, you don't want to pay for your team. It all came back on me. You know, where's my character was my fight? What am I fighting for? Where am I? Where's my character? And it came back on me and that I'm worthy of a finding my character in my spot of honesty. And I think that's what I hope that most people find, I think that most people suffer, suffer with tremendous pain that they don't feel value in who they are and what they are building. What they do matters in the world that I think if I could tell anyone anything, please God don't believe that. That's the biggest lie out there. That's the biggest fake news. I don't mean to be political. Not No, I hear you though. But that's that's the biggest not truth. There is more. There's more realistic consumption. There's more to us than it there'll be clickbait there's more to us than vacations. You know, each and every human being has the opposite opportunity to change the world. And if they don't believe that delivery, free trial.   Michael Hingson  43:58 Well, like Gandhi once said, Be the change you want to see in the world. I think we all so often, probably don't recognize how much we probably are changing the world just by what we do. And sometimes that change may not be for the best. But then we have to look at ourselves to find out why that's the case. If we even recognize that we're changing the world.   Charlie Cohen  44:22 Yeah, it's hard to see but you know, me personally, I think that the fact is that the world is here. You know, we're the world is here. We are a lot of us alive. We have the potential for a great future. We have incredible innovations that could happen any day, diseases cured, food, water shortage, problem solved. And you know, waiting that error that corruption and selfishness aren't important. You know, I think that's what I'm waiting for personally, but a world that corruption and what's in it for me is not the most important thing. Yeah, no, I think we're there. I think there's like people like you a lot of great people out there. And I think there's more good than the newsletter. And I honestly believe that I see it. I believe it. I hear about it.   Michael Hingson  45:11 We look for way too much sensationalism rather than substance.   Charlie Cohen  45:15 Yeah. Before it arquivo always.   Michael Hingson  45:20 So you have six children? I think you said,   Charlie Cohen  45:23 Yeah, well, yeah. As they say, Yeah. Wonderful. Unbelievable. Yeah, I, I wouldn't have probably been the worst, you are the most, you know, I could care less to being a decent good Jew. It's It's shocking to me that the life I live?   Michael Hingson  45:37 And do they all consider you a good coach.   Charlie Cohen  45:40 I don't know. I don't buy kids like me. You know, I try not to be so hard. You know, I, you know, I try to be more very mellow and very easygoing with them. I, you can't coach your kids, because there's too much emotional involvement. You can be there for your kids. But like, I can't coach my kids, do what I'm saying. I can't coach my wife. I wish I could.   Michael Hingson  46:01 Well, she probably thinks she can coach you. But you know.   Charlie Cohen  46:06 If I had half a brain, I would say she can. Yeah, I don't know if I'm that. I don't know if at that point, little video,   Michael Hingson  46:13 whether you listen, but you know,   Charlie Cohen  46:16 I should appear coachable?   Michael Hingson  46:19 How old are the kids?   Charlie Cohen  46:21 So my oldest is 19. And my youngest is eight.   Michael Hingson  46:25 Wow. Well, you know what, I kind of disagree that you can't coach your kids. But coaching is different with kids is ultimately who you are and what you are. And the kind of example that that you bring to them. So you can't tell them what to do. But hopefully you get them to establish a mindset that shows them that you are there for them, as you said, and they can come to you on, you're going to do everything you can to help them with whatever they do.   Charlie Cohen  47:01 100% But what I meant as a coach is I can't use I can't say I can keep you under attack that you will start to cry, you know, you're gonna   Michael Hingson  47:12 Yeah, you know, well, that's, that's some of the best coaching in the world is all about loving them.   Charlie Cohen  47:17 Yeah, that's true. I hope I do a good job. Now, sometimes, you know, when I when when a discipline I'll do is to defend my wife, you know, I have to be a hard, tough it's not because of anything an insult to me. It's because the kids act up to the mother, and I'm coming in as an enforcer to help her. And I'll put my foot down, you know, and I think it's those opportunities to be a tough guy. You know, you know, tell my kids that, you know, my job is to be a good father. You know, being liked, it's not that important to me. You know, my job is to be good. And I'm only tough when it's not personal towards me. You know, when it's about my, you know, something disrespectful to my wife, you know, I say that to get angry, but two things lying and being disrespectful. And besides that, I have no other   Michael Hingson  47:57 lying and what was the other one is disrespectful. disrespect? Yeah. Well, that's the, the issue is that, you know, parents can't always be friends, but they can be parents and True. True. Hopefully, kids learn. Well, hopefully good kids. Well, any kid can learn that by the time at least they grow up when they have to go through it, that they recognize that there's value in it.   Charlie Cohen  48:21 I have great kids. You seriously wonderful, wonderful, wonderful each and every one is so wonderful, uniquely wonderful. Easy. Yeah. Oh, the parent conversations I always have with teachers. It's just like, two seconds that got one of them had to get up. One of the kids get out, you know. Does a great job.   Michael Hingson  48:39 Have we all been over and visited the states at all? Yeah, sure.   Charlie Cohen  48:42 We did. The Disney World thing was great. My mom and stepdad to Disney World. And it was wonderful. You know, we've been a few times my wife has family there. I brought my kids for his bar mitzvah to see a Red Sox playoff game and problem to a Patriots game and I had a blast.   Michael Hingson  48:59 So while they were there, so while they were up there in New England, they get some lobster.   Charlie Cohen  49:05 Nah, no, it's not.   Michael Hingson  49:08 Yeah, that's true.   Charlie Cohen  49:10 I didn't know that. Oh, don't worry about it. I don't expect you to know Jewish law of costumes. It's okay.   Michael Hingson  49:17 Yeah, well, I didn't think about the fact that there's the kosher issue that yeah, that   Charlie Cohen  49:22 works. No worries. It's okay. Yeah,   Michael Hingson  49:25 well, you know, but but going to well go into a game that's kosher. Just just don't eat all the food.   Charlie Cohen  49:33 That's true. You know, and there's so much kosher food today in America. It's just, you know, I used to not eat kosher food, and I don't really miss much the other thing I miss his by pepperoni pizza. That's the only thing I'd say it's like something you're just never gonna get in the kosher world. I never like lobster. So I don't miss   Michael Hingson  49:50 I liked lobster. But what what my favorite Salami is kosher salami.   Charlie Cohen  49:55 Ah, see, there you go. The salt is awesome. Yeah, yeah.   Michael Hingson  50:00 That's always been the best. I've never been a fan of Italian salami, like like kosher salami, I grew up with it. My mother is Jewish. So I count. And we we always the only salami we ever had was kosher salami. And what has always been one of my favorites?   Charlie Cohen  50:15 You said your mother's Jewish? Uh huh.   Michael Hingson  50:18 Well was now she's passed. But yeah,   Charlie Cohen  50:20 yeah. I don't know if you know this, according to Jewish law that makes you Jewish.   Michael Hingson  50:24 I understand. That's why I said I count.   Charlie Cohen  50:28 You do as much as me. That's cool.   Michael Hingson  50:31 Yeah, and I. But I also think that from a religious standpoint, all of us need to recognize that all these religions come from the same place. And it's just crazy the way people think that they're the only one in town and it just doesn't work that way.   Charlie Cohen  50:49 I hope I don't I hope I don't come across like that. You sir. Dude, I do yell at me. If you do I give you permission to be my coach and say to me that that's not what I'm here for. I'm better than that. Don't do that. If I come back, like that smell like   Michael Hingson  51:03 the habit and haven't even heard that attitude once. But I see it as you do so much in the world.   Charlie Cohen  51:09 If I put my ego out there, you know, I always want everyone wants to be right and feel right. So it's like, maybe, you know, I always think if I fell into that trap, you know, but you know, at the end of the day, it is trying to do good. You're just trying to hope that the world survives, and, and that people hear your message about you know, that they can do unbelievably awesome things and grow. And so, you know, I read that book, How to Win Friends and Influence People. And I'm sure you did, too. You know, by criticizing, condemning complaining, it's just not going to accomplish anything.   Michael Hingson  51:41 So I can tell just doesn't it? It just doesn't help having a book. I used to say, I'm my own worst critic, and I've been learning, that's really the wrong thing to say. Because that's, that's still a negative thing. And so what I do believe is that I'm, if I learn to step back and be objective, I'm my own best evaluator. And I might, I can be my own best teacher, but I don't need to be my own worst critic. It's really a question of looking at things and deciding what I can learn. And I'm better at doing that for me than anyone else. If I allow myself to be that way. Wow.   Charlie Cohen  52:28 You're an Israeli and be a big rabbi. Okay.   Michael Hingson  52:31 Well, I want to get over there and visit. You know, I worked for accessiBe, which is an Israeli company. Yeah. Makes products that help make websites accessible. We got to get you how far are you from Tel Aviv?   Charlie Cohen  52:45 Not far at all. Please, please look me up. That'd be great. I'll be happy.   Michael Hingson  52:49 Well, we're gonna we're gonna have to introduce you to folks at accessiBe.   Charlie Cohen  52:53 Not really, it's nice, I'd love to meet everybody. That's wonderful. But one   Michael Hingson  52:57 of the things that I've noticed over the past year and a half is AccessiBe has a culture where it truly wants to make a positive difference in the world. And that's why the company B began, well, the company began because three guys needed to make a bunch of websites that they created for people accessible, but they've expanded that. And I love the accessiBe goal, which is to make the entire internet accessible and inclusive by 2025. And yes, it's a lofty goal. But, but it's, it's an appropriate goal. And I wish more people would buy into that concept. And accessiBe has worked very hard at it. And everything that I have observed about the excessive bee culture is all about being a culture that truly wants to serve. Yes, it's a company that wants to make money. It's a company that sells a product. But deep down, it's a company that has a culture that's servant based, which is really important. That's   Charlie Cohen  54:02 awesome to work for a company that you love and feel that good about. Yeah, I'd be happy to help you guys. You know, I'm a sales guy. I love business to business. Maybe there you go some service.   Michael Hingson  54:11 Well, I'll I'll have to introduce you.   Charlie Cohen  54:15 Wonderful, wonderful. I hope when you come out Israel, I get a chance to see a person tour guides if you bring your wife or we can bring you some tours,   Michael Hingson  54:22 as long as you have wheelchair accessible places to take her. Yeah, we'll figure it out. Not make it work. But we definitely want to do that at some point. And as soon as accessiBe wants me to come over, but we're having a lot of fun doing the podcasts. So they must they must tolerate me and like me, because we continue to do it.   Charlie Cohen  54:41 I appreciate you having me on the show. What an honor. Thank you.   Michael Hingson  54:45 So you've been studying the Talmud for a long time. And I think that is extremely important and valuable. What's the what's a piece of wisdom that you can convey to us? What's something that you've learned that you think people should really take? away from your studies.   Charlie Cohen  55:01 Yeah, I'll tell you something you taught me for 20 years, you know, the Talmud refers an Aramaic, to someone that can't see, so to speak. sygate and a whore, Tara make for great light, soggy, no whore, gray light in rough shape. This was one of those great rabbis of the Talmud, from what 19 years ago, that, you know, couldn't see physically and that's how they refer to him. And I always thought was like, like, like, trying to say something nice, you know, in a nice way. But you said something on one of your, your interviews, I think I saw you, when you said that, you know, those of us are like dependent, and I have a son who's insulin dependent. So I understand what that means. I am blind dependent, and you're not. And then it hit me wow, that's the meaning of soggy, no more. You you make the most of your life. And because you make the most of your life, it is more than enough for you. And probably in reality, you have more life than most people on Earth. And now I got the meaning of that very, very cool phrase, which I always thought was like, a euphemism like, you know, trying to cover up something. But I think now that you gave me a direct, indirect meaning it's literally true. Sagi no more. So that's something I learned this week from you.   Michael Hingson  56:16 Well, thank you. I appreciate that. And I'm honored that you think that way? If, and I certainly want to contribute any way that I can can and that's all we can, can really do. Yeah, is contributed as best we can.   Charlie Cohen  56:32 That's it. I hope people listening here agree with me what I said about you.   Michael Hingson  56:37 Well, thank you. Pleasure, what do you think about SARP? Our potential for the future? You know, again, with all your studies, and so on, what's what's a positive thing that you can think of for the future? What Yeah, what do you want people to take away as a message from all this for? where we're going? Or they're our future?   Charlie Cohen  56:54 No, thank you. There's one thing you know, there's lots of prophecies out there, you know, and whether they're, how do you say this? When you can see into something transparency? Like how old are they I producer, Thomas, this TV show? You know, people freaked out about the Nostradamus prophecies, blah, blah, blah. But like, Yeah, his prophecies here that are written they translated by the Greeks 1000s of years ago? And how close are they enacted? are they and how well do they descri

O Tarz Mı?
S08E01 - Yeni Sezon Çeyrek Altını ft. Sarp Apak

O Tarz Mı?

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2022 40:14


Inspector Kazım, nargile Bono, zehirli tavuklar ve dahası...

The Energy Question
Episode 3: Enverus Vice President Sarp Ozkan and USOGA President Tim Stewart

The Energy Question

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2022 27:18


In Episode 3 of The Energy Question with David Blackmon, David and Stu Turley interview Sarp Ozkan, Vice President of Commercial Product at Enverus and Tim Stewart, President of the U.S. Oil & Gas Association, for their respective takes on the "Inflation Reduction Act" passed by the Democratic Party and signed into law by president Joe Biden.

BOAT Briefing
112: BOAT Briefing: Which superyachts will make their show debuts this autumn?

BOAT Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2022 30:27


In this week's podcast Sophia is joined by BOAT US Editor Cecile, who is fresh from a holiday in Switzerland. With yacht show season fast approaching the pair discuss which yachts they are most excited about hopefully seeing, including 75 metre Kensho, 62 metre CRN Rio and the new Sunreef 80 Eco. They also briefly discuss Sophia's first hybrid experience on Benetti Goga and the Monaco Energy Boat Challenge.  In the news is the launch of Project Witchcraft,  Gallant Lady's refit and an exciting update from Turkish yard Sarp. The data story this week looks at the brokerage numbers from Q2, with an impressive 138 yachts sold. https://www.boatinternational.com/yachts/news/kensho-admiral-yachts https://www.boatinternational.com/yachts/news/benetti-first-byond  https://www.boatinternational.com/business/news/monaco-energy-boat-challenge-2022 https://www.boatinternational.com/yachts/news/project-witchcraft-amels-launched https://www.boatinternational.com/yacht-market-intelligence/brokerage-sales-news/sarp-yachts-nacre-62 https://www.boatinternational.com/yachts/news/codecasa-yacht-boji https://www.boatinternational.com/yachts/news/gtx116-pershing-begins-construction https://www.boatinternational.com/yachts/news/gallant-lady-refit-feadship

Red Wing's Oil and Gas HSE Podcast
Four Forces of the Energy Revolution. Ep198

Red Wing's Oil and Gas HSE Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 22:04


In this episode our host Russell Stewart talks with Sarp Ozkan, Sr. Director, Power & Renewables at Enverus.  Many of you will be familiar with the old “Drilling Info”, which is now a part of Enverus – an international company serving the full energy value chain.  Listen as Russell and Sarp discuss the future of energy, the headwinds facing solar and wind, and the necessities that will still require oil & gas. Contact Sarp Ozkan via LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/sarpozkan Company website: www.enverus.com This episode is made possible by mCloud Corp  Brought to you on the Oil and Gas Global Network, the largest and most listened-to podcast network for the oil and energy industry. More from OGGN ...PodcastsLinkedIn GroupLinkedIn Company PageGet notified about industry events  

Red Wing's Oil and Gas HSE Podcast
Four Forces of the Energy Revolution. Ep198

Red Wing's Oil and Gas HSE Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 22:04


In this episode our host Russell Stewart talks with Sarp Ozkan, Sr. Director, Power & Renewables at Enverus.  Many of you will be familiar with the old “Drilling Info”, which is now a part of Enverus – an international company serving the full energy value chain.  Listen as Russell and Sarp discuss the future of energy, the headwinds facing solar and wind, and the necessities that will still require oil & gas. Contact Sarp Ozkan via LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/sarpozkan Company website: www.enverus.com This episode is made possible by mCloud Corp  Brought to you on the Oil and Gas Global Network, the largest and most listened-to podcast network for the oil and energy industry. More from OGGN …PodcastsLinkedIn GroupLinkedIn Company PageGet notified about industry events  

O Tarz Mı?
S07E36-Eşofman Terörü ft. Melikşah Altuntaş, Sarp Apak (Sezon Finali)

O Tarz Mı?

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2022 63:04


Kandil Gibi Kullanılanlar, Kokonalar, Müşteri Haklıdır ve dahası...

Choses à Savoir
D'où vient le nom “Europe” ?

Choses à Savoir

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 2:40


L'Europe a enfin réussi à afficher son unité face à l'invasion de l'Ukraine par la Russie. Mais d'où le Vieux continent, comme on l'appelle aussi, tire-t-il son nom ? Quelle étymologie pour le mot "Europe" ? Le mot "Europe" peut avoir deux étymologies. Pour certains, il viendrait de deux mots latins, "ôps", qui veut dire "vue" ou "visage" et "eurus", qui signifie "large". Ainsi, Europe, qui est le nom d'un personnage de la mythologie grecque, voulait-il dire "aux larges yeux". Nous allons revenir sur la vie de cette Europe. Mais certains spécialistes donnent une autre origine au mot "Europe". Il serait tiré d'un mot phénicien, "ereb", qui voudrait dire "soir". Il désigne donc l'Ouest, l'endroit où le soleil se couche. L'Europe serait donc ainsi opposée à l'Est, c'est-à-dire au Levant. Une nymphe qui séduit Zeus Quoi qu'il en soit de l'origine de son nom, c'est bien la belle Europe, ou Europê, qui a donné le sien au Vieux continent. C'était la fille d'un roi légendaire, qui régnait à Tyr, dans le Liban actuel. Zeus la voit et tombe sous son charme. On sait à quel point le roi des dieux grecs est sensible à la beauté féminine. Mais il doit se garder de la jalousie de son épouse, l'impérieuse Junon. Heureusement pour lui, il a plus d'un tour dans son sac. Pour approcher la belle Europe, il prend la forme d'un taureau blanc, dont Ovide a chanté la beauté. Sous cette apparence bovine, il se mêle alors aux troupeaux du roi de Tyr. Bien sûr, la jeune fille le remarque. Séduite, elle monte même sur son dos. Et le taureau divin l'entraîne au-dessus des flots jusqu'en Crète. Là, le taureau laisse la place au dieu, qui s'unit à la fille du roi. De cette union naissent trois enfants, dont le célèbre Minos, futur roi de Crète, qui aura maille à partir avec le Minotaure. Plus tard, il régnera dans les Enfers avec son frère Rhadamante. Quant au dernier frère, Sarpédon, il fonde la ville de Milet, en Lycie, aujourd'hui en Asie Mineure. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices